Did you watch the video to confirm or discount?
I have better things to do with my time . I wonder if one pf the contributing factors to unvaccinated accident rates is fatigue from scouring through / obsessing over this cr@p?
Did you watch the video to confirm or discount?
Sure. So you don't know any of the problems in the work, because you're not competent to find them. That means you are not competent enough to be lying.I have better things to do with my time . I wonder if one pf the contributing factors to unvaccinated accident rates is fatigue from scouring through / obsessing over this cr@p?
...the factors making people more likely to avoid covid vaccines also contribute to a higher risk of them hurting others in mva's. Not surprisingly, they found that to be true.
Yeah, there are many different reasons people made whichever choices they made. It's a mistake to count everyone who accepted or rejected it as if there was only one possible reason for the choice.Vaccine and me. I weighed a lot of things up and came to the conclusion that the vaccine was on the level because a)if they wanted they can do us anytime with better ways, and b) it made sense to just keep things going at their timeline, all in their own time, and this (the pandemic) was not to their plans, if any. The vaccine was straight. that said, i just had the first and the booster, and would not have continued because naturally it would have had sh** in it too. But at the time, neighbours were dying, it was real.
New Scientific Study Shows Moderna Twice As Likely To Cause Heart Inflammation As Pfizer Vaccine
A newly published scientific study found that incidents of heart inflammation after a COVID-19 vaccination is twice as high in the Moderna (mRNA-1273) vaccine as it is in the Pfizer (BNT162b2) vaccine and that on average, Moderna's second-dose vaccine caused 269 cases of heart inflammation for...nationalfile.com
"The association of increased risk of COVID-19 with higher numbers of prior vaccine doses in our study, was unexpected," the study reads. "A simplistic explanation might be that those who received more doses were more likely to be individuals at higher risk of COVID-19. A small proportion of individuals may have fit this description. However, the majority of subjects in this study were generally young individuals and all were eligible to have received at least 3 doses of vaccine by the study start date, and which they had every opportunity to do."
"Therefore, those who received fewer than 3 doses (>45% of individuals in the study) were not those ineligible to receive the vaccine, but those who chose not to follow the CDC's recommendations on remaining updated with COVID-19 vaccination, and one could reasonably expect these individuals to have been more likely to have exhibited higher risk-taking behavior," it continued. "Despite this, their risk of acquiring COVID-19 was lower than those who received a larger number of prior vaccine dose
Remember they had almost 1/2 their employees not get vaccinated. so who really knows???Great find, David RvR, this study from Cleveland Clinic, known as perhaps the very top medical center in the world
Study shows chances of contracting COVID increase with each vaccine dose
Why would that be considered a negative for the reliability of the study?Remember they had almost 1/2 their employees not get vaccinated. so who really knows???
the dunning Kruger effect at its finest.I took safe and effective Ivermectin and it worked for me and I have no qualms about using it in the future.
There should also be a marketplace for unvaccinated blood as I know if I was ever in hospital I would pay whatever the cost for normal blood to keep my immune system working as nature intended.
You might be right foofie. And which group do you believe you belong in?the dunning Kruger effect at its finest.
yes I aways think people know more then they do when it is something I am good at.You might be right foofie. And which category do you believe you belong to?
The Dunning-Kruger effect effect occurs when a person’s lack of knowledge and skills in a certain area cause them to overestimate their own competence. By contrast, this effect also causes those who excel in a given area to think the task is simple for everyone, and underestimate their relative abilities as well."
So you believe that you excel at understanding scientific medical research?yes I aways think people know more then they do when it is something I am good at.