Anti-vax reality check.

  • Thread starter Captain Nemesis
  • Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Sponsored Links
Sheeple in action

0_Anti-vax-protest.jpg
Amazing that when an unvaccinated person uses that term then it is deemed abusive.
But when a vaccinated person uses that term it’s fine.
Nice to see DIYnot doesn’t discriminate in any way shape or form (y)
The equality on here is second to none.
 
Last edited:
Read the boards, it's all there.
Rights being violated.
I bet 99.9% of the people who want a compulsory vaccine are the same ones who were totally against this government and the previous, criticising them on all fronts, calling them killers of the common people, assassins of the working class and elite supporters.
All of a sudden the same people follow bojo and co's instructions to the letter and have become the executors of whatever the same government says.
Can you see this?
I'll make it simpler:
Yesterday you were saying : boris Johnson is a w#nker and only cares for the rich.
Today you say: boris Johnson said to stay home, shut our business, don't hug our loved ones and get jabbed, he cares about us, working class and poor.
The thing is, for sane, rational, people its a matter of public health, not political ideology.

Like with climate change, it really does seem that the more right-wing people are, the more they tend to regard science and evidence as political oppression, conspiracy, etc.
 
Sponsored Links
I wish you would.



I really wasn't.



No, I really didn't.
Sorry, too complicated for your 3 neurons, my apologies.
YOU doesn't mean you personally Mr denso, it means john smith, the average person who did what is described in my post.
 
The thing is, for sane, rational, people its a matter of public health, not political ideology.

Like with climate change, it really does seem that the more right-wing people are, the more they tend to regard science and evidence as political oppression, conspiracy, etc.
Evidence to your unsubstantiated claim please.
As you always ask for links even for personal opinions...
 
YOU doesn't mean you personally Mr denso, it means john smith, the average person who did what is described in my post.

I knew exactly what you meant and answered as an average person. You were tarring everyone with the same brush and simply wrong.
 
Brace yourselves ...

Son 1 told me that "loads" of kids have "colds" at the moment. We're all testing ... hoping it is just a cold doing the rounds.
 
Evidence to your unsubstantiated claim please.

Anti-vaccine sentiment is strongly associated with conspiracy thinking and protection of individual freedoms, traits that are finding a home among far-right groups.


The anti-vax movement is being radicalized by far-right political extremism ... there is a worrisome convergence of the anti-vaccine movement and far-right political extremism.


certain demographics are more hesitant to take advantage of the shot. According to a new NPR/Marist study, 41% of self-identified Republicans, 34% of Independents, and 11% of Democrats say they do not plan on becoming vaccinated. Americans were also broken down by race, generation, education level, and voting history, and Republican men comprise the most anti-vaccine group. Compared to 34% of Republican women, 14% of Democrat women, and only 6% of Democrat men, 49% of Republican men say they will not get the vaccine.


The far right has jumped on the anti-vaccination bandwagon, seized control of the wheel, and is driving the vehicle, al-Qaeda-style, straight into oncoming traffic.

Both in the United States and globally, the far right has long been infected by various harmful delusions—the superiority of white people, the fiction of climate change, the evils of government. As the far right has spread, thanks to vectors like Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro and Viktor Orbán and Narendra Modi, those delusions have mutated.

Now, with its anti-vaccine opportunism, the far right is circulating a new delta variant of global stupidity: virally through social media, in a shower of spit and invective on the street, and through top-down lunacy from politicians and political parties. Covid-19 and all of its variants will eventually burn themselves out, though at who knows what cost. The latest versions of global stupidity promoted by the far right, however, are proving far more resistant to science, reason, and just plain common sense.



YouGov, another polling operation, asked a similar question this month about the COVID vaccine. Nearly a third (32%) of Republicans believe the vaccine is a tool for the government to implant microchips, compared to 14% of Democrats and 18% of independents who ascribe to the bizarre (and dangerous) theory. About two-thirds (65%) of Democrats and less than a third (32%) of Republicans believe the theory is "definitely false."


Anti-covid vax sentiment on the right, by contrast, is fuelled by the country’s deepest divisions and the conservative entrepreneurs, in media and politics, who aggravate them. It explains why America’s vaccination rate has slowed in recent weeks, despite the availability of vaccines, an uptick in infections and deaths, and the fact that a third of adults have not received a first dose. Surveys suggest this large minority is overwhelmingly Republican. It represents half the party’s voters, predictably dominated by its most pessimistic and conspiracy-prone groups, white evangelicals and rural folk: the Trumpian base.


analysis showed a positive correlation (r = 0.14; p < 0.001) in line with a previously obtained positive relationship of conservatism and right-wing ideology with an endorsement of ... pandemic related conspiracies


Coronavirus and conspiracies: how the far right is exploiting the pandemic.


About a third (34%) of Republicans and independents who lean to the GOP say the theory that powerful people intentionally planned the COVID-19 outbreak is probably or definitely true, compared with 18% of Democrats and Democratic leaners.

Conservative Republicans are especially likely to see at least some truth in the theory: Roughly four-in-ten (37%) say it is probably or definitely true. This contrasts with 29% of moderate and liberal Republicans, 24% of moderate and conservative Democrats and 10% of liberal Democrats.
 
Some fella working in a german petroleum station was shot by some fruit cake who objected to being asked to wear a mask

Polio vaccinaters are often targeted abroad by anti vaxers
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Sponsored Links
Back
Top