Mental health medications probably the biggest moneymaker. They don't even really have to work right, since everyone has different chemistry.
― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 14 March 2014 18:58 (twelve years ago)
have to assume that these "don't trust BIG PHARM" types are equally suspicious of all other large capitalist industries and shun them accordingly
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Friday, 14 March 2014 19:00 (twelve years ago)
Well considering how often a lot of them insist that we are literally being POISONED by one of the safest food supplies man has ever known
― james franco tur(oll)ing test (Hurting 2), Friday, 14 March 2014 19:02 (twelve years ago)
these people are beyond science and reason
― rhyme heals all goons (m bison), Friday, 14 March 2014 19:53 (twelve years ago)
I felt like a bit of an asshole for my reply to this person last night (something like "can't wait for all of the people you and your kid will infect") but it genuinely pisses me off because this is a difference of opinion that manages to fuck over other people.
― Neanderthal, Friday, 14 March 2014 20:03 (twelve years ago)
that's kind of the sad punchline. people try to reason or use scientific explanations to debunk ideas rooted in a lack of interest in science and reason.
I recommend engaging logical fallacies. For instance: - Find an example of a conspiracy advocate who had their kids vaccinated. If they did it, there might be a reason! - I don't know anyone with measles but these vaccinations have to have some purpose and a lot of otherwise intelligent (or influential) people have received them. Do you think maybe they're actually protection against chemtrails?
― have a nice blood (mh), Friday, 14 March 2014 20:06 (twelve years ago)
― rhyme heals all goons (m bison), Friday, March 14, 2014 3:53 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
unfortunately you are actually otm:
http://m.pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2014/02/25/peds.2013-2365.abstract
― k3vin k., Friday, 14 March 2014 20:48 (twelve years ago)
Oh Kristin http://defamer.gawker.com/reality-star-idiot-kristin-cavallari-refuses-to-vacci-1544086342
― get up in this twerk cypher (sunny successor), Friday, 14 March 2014 21:51 (twelve years ago)
"Listen, to each their own," she said. "I understand both sides of it. I've read too many books about autism and there's some scary statistics out there. It's our personal choice, and, you know, if you're really concerned about your kid get them vaccinated."
Read too many books, eh? I knew it.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 14 March 2014 22:21 (twelve years ago)
didn't know they made popup books about vaccination
― Neanderthal, Friday, 14 March 2014 22:22 (twelve years ago)
stupid two sides to every issue idea is ruining the world
― sent from my butt (harbl), Friday, 14 March 2014 22:22 (twelve years ago)
http://sd.keepcalm-o-matic.co.uk/i/to-read-too-many-books-is-harmful.png
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 14 March 2014 22:23 (twelve years ago)
Wow, sorry. That's big.
― Josh in Chicago, Friday, 14 March 2014 22:24 (twelve years ago)
keep calm and read too many books about autism
― sent from my butt (harbl), Friday, 14 March 2014 22:24 (twelve years ago)
she's trying to come off all "don't be judgey" except these choices don't just fuck your own kids, they fuck a whole lot of people's kids, kids who don't have the luxury of choosing vaccination. seriously, fuck these people.
was kinda shocked recently to find out my MIL is somewhat of an anti-vaxxer (she was play therapist for autistic kids for years). really had to bite my tongue, but didn't do a very good job of it.
― just1n3, Friday, 14 March 2014 23:30 (twelve years ago)
welcome to the age of pseudoscience
― Neanderthal, Friday, 14 March 2014 23:33 (twelve years ago)
As opposed to the age of no pseudoscience?
― tsrobodo, Saturday, 15 March 2014 00:49 (twelve years ago)
its an endless age
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 15 March 2014 00:49 (twelve years ago)
Someone with a young daughter was going to get her vacced for HPV with Gardasil, and then saw the scam article that says IT'S DANGEROUS and of course immediately believed it. I sent her the Snopes entry on the subject and her response was, "It's good to hear both sides, I want all the information to make decisions for my child." NO. NO IT IS NOT GOOD, THERE ARE NOT TWO SIDES JESUS CHRIST
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Saturday, 15 March 2014 13:46 (twelve years ago)
"information"
― pings can only get wetter (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 15 March 2014 13:49 (twelve years ago)
some people lack the basic faculties to differentiate between sources like a respected medical journal and, say, aintitcoolnews.com (#lorax)
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 15 March 2014 13:56 (twelve years ago)
It's someone I really don't want to alienate bc it would disturb other important relationships, but oh my god.
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Saturday, 15 March 2014 14:06 (twelve years ago)
yeah it's hard to tread lightly in these cases when it's friends or family. serious question - what's the demographic for the anti-vaxx community? if there is a definitive one.
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 15 March 2014 14:13 (twelve years ago)
Perpetuating this stupidity doesn't require people to be ANTI-vax, it only requires them to enjoy play-acting at being thoughtful and rational by "weighing" the "pros and cons" on "both sides."
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Saturday, 15 March 2014 14:16 (twelve years ago)
I think it makes people feel smart to say they're doing that, right?
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Saturday, 15 March 2014 14:17 (twelve years ago)
I'm guessing it's alien to me as part of my anxiety includes OCD tendencies so whenever I do the 'weighing the pros and cons' that involves me reading 3000 articles which by then makes me well aware of the quackery on the other side.
― Neanderthal, Saturday, 15 March 2014 14:20 (twelve years ago)
― Kiarostami bag (milo z), Saturday, 15 March 2014 15:39 (twelve years ago)
I was mad when I wrote that. Really I believe that if someone's behavior seems nonsensical it's just because you don't understand their motivations. This is not really about whether or not the vaccine is secretly harmful, it's about something else (or elses). Most obviously in this case parents' understandable reluctance to deal with the idea of their child as a sexual person at age 12.
― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Saturday, 15 March 2014 15:52 (twelve years ago)
serious question - what's the demographic for the anti-vaxx community? if there is a definitive one.
Hippies and wannabe "attachment parents". Try the forums @ Mothering.com, they eat you alive if you even mention vaccinations.
― franny glass, Saturday, 15 March 2014 15:54 (twelve years ago)
yeah i always tell myself that the left's antiscience idiocy (vaccines, gmos) isn't nearly as harmful as the right's but the gap isn't as large as i'd like. i guess the left's antiscience is rooted in something far more anodyne and vaguely right (corporations are always evil and should not be trusted, govt is controlled by coroporations) than the right's antiscience is (corporations are always good, government is anti-business, b-b-but the bible, general misogyny and racism).
― balls, Saturday, 15 March 2014 16:34 (twelve years ago)
The Left's antiscience idiocy is as harmful cos the right isn't going to care about the poor at any rate and if the left abandons them for essential oils and spa days then the poor are really sh*t out of luck.
― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 15 March 2014 16:48 (twelve years ago)
the return of diseases that were targets for eradication and were nearly regionally eradicated a few years ago and the labeling or even banning of gmos don't compare to anti-enviromental regulation, anti-alternative energy research funding, anti-science research funding in general, or inaction on global warming imo
― balls, Saturday, 15 March 2014 16:58 (twelve years ago)
https://scontent-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-frc3/t1.0-9/1455032_288122684677356_1539879744_n.jpg
― how's life, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 12:15 (twelve years ago)
sorry, that's just the first time anything like this has even come across my facebook feed and I wanted to share it.
― how's life, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 12:18 (twelve years ago)
"so your saying vaccination will halve my child's risk of dying of pertussis? sorry, not good enough"
― instant wrinkle filler (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 26 March 2014 12:22 (twelve years ago)
Yeah, but if it only kills a few kids a year, what's the big deal?
― Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 12:43 (twelve years ago)
Finally realized that the person who shared it is NOT an anti-vaxxer, but had misinterpreted the image to be PRO-vaccination.
― how's life, Wednesday, 26 March 2014 13:52 (twelve years ago)
That's some pernicious bullshit.
Pertussis was ubiquitous pre-vaccination: http://www.cdc.gov/pertussis/surv-reporting/cases-by-year.html
Worldwide, pertussis deaths in infants are far from rare, maybe 1% of cases. That includes a lot of babies with poor nutrition etc, wouldn't be that high in North America, but still.
The "without vaccination" numbers there assume herd immunity, and are probably sadly already out of date.
― Plasmon, Thursday, 27 March 2014 01:55 (twelve years ago)
I seriously just got in an argument with someone who calls himself a 'health care professional', who says flu vaccines aren't safe because one in one or two million cases might get GBS (in which, the causal link hasn't even been proven).
This is about the same odds as dying in a plane crash. If .0000001% chance of something 'bad' happening = unsafe, then I wonder what drugs ARE safe.
― Neanderthal, Monday, 31 March 2014 17:49 (twelve years ago)
sorry .0001%
― Neanderthal, Monday, 31 March 2014 17:54 (twelve years ago)
I will say that nothing makes me feel grosser than being stuck on an airplane breathing who knows what from people with who knows what. They should ban airplanes.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 31 March 2014 18:09 (twelve years ago)
really they should just have the oxygen masks down at all times
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Monday, 31 March 2014 18:13 (twelve years ago)
there was one period last year where I got sick after three consecutive flights, one time with bronchitis :/
― Neanderthal, Monday, 31 March 2014 18:56 (twelve years ago)
I get a cold almost every time I travel, although I think it's partially due to not sleeping enough and being a little stressed by travel.
― have a nice blood/orange bitters cocktail (mh), Monday, 31 March 2014 19:08 (twelve years ago)
― Neanderthal, Monday, March 31, 2014 1:49 PM (1 hour ago)
whether infuenza vaccination causes ("causes") GBS is very controversial -- as you say, if the association does exist, it is somewhere on the magnitude of an extra case per million vaccinated. i'm still not fully convinced that the association, even from 1976, is causal. influenza itself can precede (and possibly predispose one to) GBS, and when some of the H1N1 data are looked at from a more distant perspective (that is, did vaccinated people get GBS more than unvaccinated people as a whole, not just in the few weeks following vaccination), the risk might even be higher among unvaccinated individuals. imo the data are very heterogenous; taken together they suggest maybe a tiny, tiny excess risk of GBS, the public health implications of which are imo absolutely negligible. we have a couple of neurologists who post here who may have something to add
there was actually a recent paper on this: http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/58/8/1149.full#F1
― surfbort memes get played out, totally (k3vin k.), Monday, 31 March 2014 19:21 (twelve years ago)
cool, thanks dude.
that's the thing, the CDC never actually confirms that GBS is caused by the vaccine, and points out the case number per week has little to do with vaccination.
they've also made very clear that the risk of GBS is much smaller than the risk of complications from the flu. that said, I haven't gotten a flu shot in years, as I always forget...got the flu in 2010 as a reward :/
― Neanderthal, Monday, 31 March 2014 19:31 (twelve years ago)
I think we had the vaccines-are-net-protective-for-GBS discussion here awhile back.
The original GBS from vaccination scare was the swine flu in 1976. There were a few hundred cases, a clear uptick in the baseline incidence but still very unlikely over the population as a whole. Subsequent flu vaccines (and vaxx in general) haven't been found to have that degree of immunopathogenicity, but the association has survived among doctors (who expect every case of GBS to have an antecedent infection or vaccination) and the public (swine flu being ground zero in the we-remember-the-70s generation's anti-govt paranoia a la Glenn Beck).
So now every year when the flu vaccine is released, the clever sorts pop up again to make their clever point about GBS. Show them no mercy imo.
― Plasmon, Tuesday, 1 April 2014 08:35 (twelve years ago)
Elite Marin County anti-vaxx, and doctors/neighbors trying to cope---here's hoping for rolling updates in the resultshttp://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2014/04/06/299910441/how-public-health-advocates-are-trying-to-reach-non-vaccinators
― dow, Tuesday, 8 April 2014 00:42 (twelve years ago)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2606066/Miso-soup-prevent-measles-Why-Alicia-Silverstone-feeding-two-year-old-son-plant-based-diet-instead-getting-vaccinated.html
#clueless
― scott seward, Friday, 18 April 2014 15:05 (twelve years ago)
"The Clueless star points out that . . ."
I see what they did there.
― nickn, Friday, 18 April 2014 17:10 (twelve years ago)