Should have never considered letting them restart in the first place but assuming they actually do keep the pause going, it's better late than never...
The pause is now officially extended through May 1, 2022.
Should have never considered letting them restart in the first place but assuming they actually do keep the pause going, it's better late than never...
Thank you for your sympathy.Christ, I'm so sorry.
I made this post for one reason. I'm one of those people where Covid isn't a big deal. It doesn't affect me nearly as much as anyone else. I was more annoyed at my inability to taste and worried that it might not come back.Actually having covid, May of 2020.
Noticed the Chicken Tortilla Soup I was eating started to have less and less taste with each bite. Panicked and called Urgent Care. Asked if I still had scent. At that point, I did, so she assured me that it might just be a sinus issue since I've had sinus issues in the past. Tried to calm down.
Next Morning, my smell was muted. Taste still gone. But the Nurse who I talked to at Urgent Care set up an appointment for a test. it took two days to tell me I had it.
That day, I had trouble walking upstairs. I felt dizzy and really tired.
From that point on, I felt really normal. My smell came back first (I love the smell of Listerine ever since, because that was the first smell that returned), and I could discern tastes a day after my smell returned.
Moderna
1st shot: sore arm for 3 days. But after that, absolutely nothing.
2nd shot: sore arm for 2 days. but after that. absolutely nothing.
Booster shot seven days ago: sore arm for a day. But after that. absolutely nothing.
Covid impact.
including my mother, grandmother, uncles, and various partners of family, friends, and co-workers, 19 people in my orbit have passed from Covid 19.
More recently was a co-worker's husband. They both thought Covid was not a big deal. I'm trying not to feel responsible. They are 17 years older than me, so all I could ever do was share my thoughts. I know at the end of the day anyone's choices as an adult are usually their own (my thoughts differ on that when their choices can affect others), but I actually feel horrible because I know how much it's affected others and I wish I could have done more. She's left the job.
Is this the point I remind everyone the Obama administration requested budget cuts to the NIH and CDC for seven years straight, and diverted funding and expertise from them to his dumbass pandemic response team that didn't actually do anything but touch up the language of national health emergency action plans that had existed since the Eisenhower administration? To cover his administration's ass after the '09 H1N1 clusterfuck?Just in time for all the mass gatherings throughout the holidays to end. Thanks Obama!
I'm almost afraid to ask, but which Bush administration?Is this the point I remind everyone the Obama administration requested budget cuts to the NIH and CDC for seven years straight, and diverted funding and expertise from them to his dumbass pandemic response team that didn't actually do anything but touch up the language of national health emergency action plans that had existed since the Eisenhower administration? To cover his administration's ass after the '09 H1N1 clusterfuck?
While not actually restocking national strategic PPE reserves, or putting forth the modicum of effort it would have required to audit PPE expiry dates? Did we just collectively forget as a people, that when the federal government did have to release inventory from our strategic reserve it turned out the inventory hadn't been audited and restocked since the Bush administration?
At a guess, Bush Jr, 1st term, during the Anthrax scares... although that would imply a level of competence from that administration so I'm not overly confident in my guess.I'm almost afraid to ask, but which Bush administration?
Depending on how you define "we", we did, judging from all the meme pictures juxtaposing Obama talking about pandemic preparedness with Trump's dismissal of the critique of his performance.Is this the point I remind everyone the Obama administration requested budget cuts to the NIH and CDC for seven years straight, and diverted funding and expertise from them to his dumbass pandemic response team that didn't actually do anything but touch up the language of national health emergency action plans that had existed since the Eisenhower administration? To cover his administration's ass after the '09 H1N1 clusterfuck?
While not actually restocking national strategic PPE reserves, or putting forth the modicum of effort it would have required to audit PPE expiry dates? Did we just collectively forget as a people, that when the federal government did have to release inventory from our strategic reserve it turned out the inventory hadn't been audited and restocked since the Bush administration?
Dubya's second term, to be precise.At a guess, Bush Jr, 1st term, during the Anthrax scares... although that would imply a level of competence from that administration so I'm not overly confident in my guess.
Obama talked about a lot of things. He did diddly fuck about most of them. The best-case scenario on that lump of shit was that it lured the American populace into a false sense of security, and gave them an easy scapegoat when the chucklefuck that replaced him proved himself to be precisely who we all already knew he was.Depending on how you define "we", we did, judging from all the meme pictures juxtaposing Obama talking about pandemic preparedness with Trump's dismissal of the critique of his performance.
Pakman's straight out his ass on this; Rogan's correct. Pakman literally made the argument as to why he's straight out his ass in the exact same video. One needn't ask themselves why mRNA vaccine research started, why it faltered in the '90s, and why only now was it revived to see precisely how far straight out his ass Pakman really is on this.So, we have this shortage of monoclonal anitbodies. Joe Rogan thinks its because of the profit motive of Big Pharma.... despite those same companies are the ones making the anitbodies.
Ya really don't need to ask who the current chair of the Senate energy committee is, when that person was seated, and what their spouse does currently, to answer that question. Manchin and Sinema are 100% rotating villains, and this dog and pony show is by design.As to the Bush comments, Biden is currently about as effective as Obama as an administration. If you haven't noticed, it means they aren't doing anything. Whinge about being obstructed and Machin this, Sinema that all you want. It's Biden's failure as he's top dog. Trump did more to fix up messes than Biden. (He just generally made things worse, so its not necessarily a positive.)
They can produce both and profit on both. We are only out of monoclonal anitbodies because everyone's opening up and there are huge spikes everywhere. It's a demand issue.Pakman's straight out his ass on this; Rogan's correct. Pakman literally made the argument as to why he's straight out his ass in the exact same video. One needn't ask themselves why mRNA vaccine research started, why it faltered in the '90s, and why only now was it revived to see precisely how far straight out his ass Pakman really is on this.
Research into mRNA vaccines literally started as a potential form of cancer treatment -- programming the immune system to attack cancer cells. And despite initially-promising results, the research died in the womb because no pharmaceutical company would invest, because chemo and radiation therapy were more profitable.
COVID vaccines are more profitable than monoclonal antibody treatments. Incredibly cheap to manufacture with a high retail price still being under patent (which the US government is defending with intractable inhumanity), and as we're now learning to the detriment of all less effective over time, least of all against better-evolved variants, with the only recourse being more shots. Pharmaceutical companies didn't even have to pay for the R&D, least of all in the US where they contracted with the companies that did develop them (on other countries' dime) for domestic distribution (on the country's dime), ergo socializing risk and cost while privatizing profit in the most picture-perfect (for late-stage capitalism) way possible.
It's the exact same song on infinite repeat we've seen every time in the past, every time there's been a major national health crisis and major health care scandal. Chemo's too profitable to put real dime on curative research for cancer. ART's too profitable to put real dime on curative research for HIV, and it suspiciously until the patent expired on Truvada for its approval for use as PrEP. And even then, Truvada's sold at a 25,000% mark-up from its cost to produce; same could be said for insulin, with its 10,000% mark-up even though the latter's had cost controls finally implemented by the government. And so on, and so on.
Except for a few things, which I mentioned in that same post.Now, I want to point out a trend that you pointed to. Many of the treatments that you cited that are profitable are not preventations. They help cure someone with a disease. The vaccine is a preventative. Using your own logic, Big Pharma is incentivised to NOT produce vaccines as this is unprofitable long term. It's why governments got involved in the first place. Big Pharma never would have bothered.
Just a question. Do you think that Big Pharma didn't make bank off the Ivermectin craze?Except for a few things, which I mentioned in that same post.
1. Pharma companies didn't pay for the R&D. It was paid for by public funding, whether by the US or other countries. Ergo, little to no private capital was invested in their development or production -- the chief argument for pharmaceutical patenting, and the oft-exorbitant pricing after those pharmaceuticals reach the market.
2. Pharma companies aren't paying for distribution. That's being paid for -- once again -- by public funding, at a price mark-up of about 2,000% at least in the US. To "offset" costs pharmaceutical companies never paid in the first place.
3. As we now know, vaccines aren't providing the long-term protection which served as their primary selling point. Their effectiveness is down by half, less for variants, six months post-administration. Hence, the "need" for boosters which are more money in pharmaceutical companies' pockets, especially as they remain protected by patents, and represent a long-term, ongoing, source of revenue. In the big picture -- as in, the societal, logistic, and infrastructural scale -- that's not curative or preventative, that's palliative, and it's exactly the same profitability model as palliative versus curative care on the individual level.
And the big one in terms of why big pharma would have gotten involved anyways,
4. Opportunity cost. Hospitals being overrun with COVID patients and therefore unable to admit patients, or having to triage patients out, for other conditions and procedures is less profitable than the best-available alternative. Oncological care is, by a wide margin, the most profitable for the pharmaceutical industry as a whole; do you think these companies are happy cancer patients are having to delay or cancel care due to COVID? or that they're getting sick and dying of COVID, thereby no longer receiving (and paying for) care?
Whilst not entirely wrong, this is also misleading.Research into mRNA vaccines literally started as a potential form of cancer treatment -- programming the immune system to attack cancer cells. And despite initially-promising results, the research died in the womb because no pharmaceutical company would invest, because chemo and radiation therapy were more profitable.
Not much, because ivermectin is off patent and a cheap generic, thus Big Pharma will have made very little. What we could call "Little Pharma" - basically chemical manufacturing companies that mass produce stuff but don't do (much) pharmaceutical R&D - probably made a tidy sum.Just a question. Do you think that Big Pharma didn't make bank off the Ivermectin craze?