• Snot Flickerman
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    10 months ago

    All of it is driven by the for profit healthcare industry, in the end.

    Why do MAGA chucklefucks not trust the healthcare industry and think vaccines are poison? Because they’re aware of the reality of the healthcare industry mostly existing to turn a profit, and not existing to help patients. Honestly, most MAGA chucklefucks are upset about the same shit we are but they lack the education to know and understand the sources of their troubles, and instead resort to idiocy like racism. They’re smart enough to pinpoint the medical/pharmaceutical industry as a problem, but they’re not smart enough to figure out that it is specifically the US’s way of doing it that makes it so hard on them and that the pharmaceutical companies may be selfish and greedy, but they tend to not be completely outright evil and looking to kill people (dead people can’t pay recurring medical bills). Worse, they’re also not smart enough to understand (or not compassionate enough to care, maybe?) how their rejection of vaccines hurts other people in the process.

    On top of that is the very real issue that COVID vaccines are no longer paid for by the US government, have inconsistent coverage on where you can get it (my partner was turned away at CVS because her insurance wasn’t accepted there, mine was. She had to wait two more weeks to get a jab elsewhere), and for the uninsured, it’s completely cost-prohibitive. It’s over $200 which is not an amount of money most US citizens have laying around every six months for a current COVID booster on a disease that isn’t going away.

    The corporate and political class are literally bleeding the workers of the US dry and making them unhealthy, long-term, and they don’t care as long as their profits in the short-term are “good enough.”

    EDIT: Describing behavior is not excusing behavior. There’s a reason I included the “or not compassionate enough to care” because god damn, that’s a lot of them.

    • @[email protected]
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      3710 months ago

      Free vaccines for people should be one of the fundamental things a government should do. Time to start putting pressure on our politicians.

      “Do you side with us or are on on the side of the viruses? You’re either with us or against us.”

      • Snot Flickerman
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        10 months ago

        Another issue is we have got to stop accepting so many reasons to not vaccinate your kids.

        What’s the point of having a policy for vaccinations when half the country just keeps going “It’s against my religion” when no religion (except maybe Scientology) is new enough to have addressed things like vaccines. It seems clear a majority of them are just people who don’t like the idea of vaccinations and are using religion as an easy cudgel to get out of it.

        I mean, you know, how religious people always use their religion. As a cudgel. To not have to follow the same rules as everyone else.

      • @[email protected]
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        010 months ago

        But, we have free vaccines.

        My pharmacy is 80m from my door, and I rolled in and got it for free. Flu too, in the same sitting.

        Oh. I’m not in America though.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      Sorry. You somehow got “Oh, the MAGAts are actually protesting the health care system” out of this?

      Also: Yes, the for profit health care system is massively fucked. The covid vaccination program actually was an example of doing things right. Government subsidized with a lot of resources put toward solving the problem.

      And this went on long before the current shitshow where CVS will actively refuse to use any of the government assistance programs because it results in a lower bottom line.

      Your heart is (probably) in the right place. But could we not defend selfish dumbfuck science deniers in our quest to talk about the problems with the health care system? They are fucking morons and it is killing not just them but others. End of story.

      • @Soleos
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        1010 months ago

        Understanding and explaining how people may develop a perspective is not a defense of those people or their perspective. Simply saying “They’re morons, end of story” is unproductive. Denouncing a nuanced examination of the problem of distrust in healthcare is counterproductive. You can humanize without condoning. And clearly the intention was to address the problem in a meaningful way.

        Or maybe I’m mistaken and the solution is “Stop being morons. End of story.” /s

        • Snot Flickerman
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          10 months ago

          Yeah, I am in no way excusing the behavior.

          However, I do think it’s an interesting contrast with how people would respond if you presented them with a marginalized black or latino community who are vaccine hesitant. Other than MAGAs, those are some of the most represented vaccine-hesitant groups.

          https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8137342/

          The major predictors of vaccine hesitancy in AA and Hispanics included: sociodemographic characteristics (e.g., younger age, female gender, lower-income/education, and larger household size); medical mistrust and history of racial discrimination; greater exposure to myths and misinformation; perceived risk of getting infected with COVID-19; past vaccine compliance and beliefs about vaccines; and concerns about the safety, efficacy, and side effects from the COVID-19 vaccines.

          Somehow I think the same person might check themselves for a fucking minute before they said “could we not defend selfish dumbfuck science deniers in our quest to talk about the problems with the health care system?” because when it’s aimed at marginalized groups, it suddenly sounds as fucked up as it is.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            Actually, I very much went off on black communities that refused to get vaccinated. If it were “Hey, we are the US Military. Come get free candy and injections from us” I would be a lot more compassionate but it was stupidity coupled with implausible conspiracies.

            But, regardless, none of that has any fucking thing to do with the healthcare system. Black communities were not hesitant because… other forms of health care cost a lot of money. They were hesitant because their parents and grandparents were fucking experimented on like lab rats. Similarly, the magats actively argue for our health care systme to remain just as fucked up as it is.

            So, again, can we not assign some heroic protest against a fucked up health care system in the face of one of the only times this country has ever gotten health care right to the fuckheads who decided The Bible, as told by Facebook, means they should shove horse pills up their asses and spread a deadly virus to everyone around them?


            Regarding the black community and vaccinations. I think the overall video was rather shitty, but Failed Mythbuster Allen Pan did a video about a vaccine gun for some reason. And the person he had been paying as his camera person basically went off on him about how he was being insensitive by wanting people to get vaccinated and the truly heinous shit the US government had done was brought up. He, like any asian raised in the US, listened and refused to disagree and mostly just tried not to get accused of a hate crime. But the outcome was: If you are that afraid that this is a giant conspiracy to fuck over minorities… go ten miles out of your way to the white people Wallgreens and get your vaccination there.

            • @candybrie
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              10 months ago

              Black communities were not hesitant because… other forms of health care cost a lot of money.

              This was not the issue with the health care system being pointed out. It’s that the health care system is fine with harming you if it will result in making them money. The opioid epidemic has hit many of these conservative communities hard. It’s not assigning some heroic intentions to them. It’s simple mistrust of something they know doesn’t give a damn about them.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          Simply saying “They’re morons, end of story” is unproductive

          Yes, but it’s not less productive than trying to educate the losers, and it takes less energy so I’m able to get back to other things quicker. Cost/benefit win.

    • @pensivepangolin
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      910 months ago

      Thank you very much for the best diagnosis of this country I’ve yet to read on here! I could agree more, and it’s frankly rather heartbreaking to see people exploited by right wing psychopaths simply because they’re too uneducated to know any better.

  • @ExfilBravo
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    910 months ago

    They call it natural selection for a reason.

  • gregorum
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    810 months ago

    2020 - S05E11 - Your Body, My Choice!

    The US may be heading to a “dangerous vaccination tipping point,” with immunization rates falling so low that population-level immunity is now at risk, and we will likely see thousands of needless deaths this respiratory virus season, two top officials for the Food and Drug Administration warned in a recent JAMA commentary. FDA Commissioner Robert Califf and top FDA vaccine regulator Peter Marks noted the profound benefits of vaccines—which save millions of lives in the US each year—and their established safety, which is monitored both passively and actively through multiple overlapping federal safety monitoring systems. And yet, “an increasing number of people in the US are now declining vaccination for a variety of reasons, ranging from safety concerns to religious beliefs,” thanks to the rise of anti-vaccine misinformation spread on social media and elsewhere on the Internet. - TV-MA, 58 mins

    SD, SHD, UHD, Dolby Vision; Dolby Stereo, Dolby Surround, Dolby Atmos

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          I don’t know man, he is either full of shit or he would be talking to the CDC about these “anomalies” instead of you. He also shouldn’t be developing a conclusion based on his own personal experience since it’s not statistically relevant and if true, doesn’t account for any other commonality between the patients with “anomalies”.

          • @PutangInaMo
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            -110 months ago

            Idk what he’s doing about it but he just said based on my health and what he’s seeing that he would not push the booster on me. Not saying he refuses to give… they offer it, but with that counseling.

  • @[email protected]
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    -910 months ago

    I think this is great,

    Let the dumb die, its unfortunate for the children who have to die because of their parents poor choices.

    Along with those who can not get vaccine’s due to immunity issues. This will ruin herd immunity but it will all work itself out.

  • 2fat4that
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    -1710 months ago

    Just let it happen. Be at peace with yourself and let them go.

    • @x4740N
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      3210 months ago

      Problem is that it puts people at risk that cannot get vaccines for legit medical reasons or don’t have access to a place where they can get vaccinated

      It can also put kids of anti-vaxxers at risk that know their parents are stupid

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Herd immunity is vulnerable to the free rider problem. Individuals who lack immunity, including those who choose not to vaccinate, free ride off the herd immunity created by those who are immune. As the number of free riders in a population increases, outbreaks of preventable diseases become more common and more severe due to loss of herd immunity.

        The freaking science teacher at my old school didn’t understand what herd immunity is. This was before COVID when vaccine retardedness was just a growing chorus of idiocy from right wing radio. Which the science teacher listened to constantly.

  • @RaoulDook
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    10 months ago

    Removed by mod

    • FaceDeer
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      1210 months ago

      Did you read the article? This is about stuff like children getting vaccinated against measles.

      • @RaoulDook
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        -210 months ago

        Nope, my bad, assumed it was about Covids.