"Vaccines don't save lives"

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xDarc

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Feb 19, 2009
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thaluikhain said:
But in general, yeah, the bullshit about vaccines really pisses me off.
Did you watch the video I posted? It's an interview with one of the scientists who made more vaccines than anyone else on earth concerned about undetected cancer causing viruses in the vaccines at Merck, the company he worked for. The problem with vaccines is what else finds their way into them that nobody bothers do serious research on. One of the polio vaccines was recalled over this in 1961.

How do you know today's vaccines are safe? You don't.
 

fletch_talon

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Nov 6, 2008
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xDarc said:
Eddie the head said:
If you are going to accuse some of a fallacy at least make sure they did it.
He did:

JazzJack2 said:
Also just so you know cancer rates are going because people are living longer (age is the biggest risk factor for cancer)
Actually, he didn't:

JazzJack2 said:
Except we have causation, the effects of age on cancer vulnerability are very well documented.
Read the bold. It says in not so many words that research has been done and has shown that there is (as definite as science can be on such things) causation. The fact that there is correlation is not the reason he is arguing that there is causation. He argues that there is causation because people have put time and money into proving that there is.
 

Eddie the head

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xDarc said:
Eddie the head said:
If you are going to accuse some of a fallacy at least make sure they did it.
He did:

JazzJack2 said:
Also just so you know cancer rates are going because people are living longer (age is the biggest risk factor for cancer)
But
JazzJack2 said:
Except we have causation, the effects of age on cancer vulnerability are very well documented.
Is what you where responding to. Ask for for this proof, but he didn't make that fallacy. A fallacy is a leap in logical thinking he stated that he dose have evidence to support this. A causation.

Also quit quote mining.
 

xDarc

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fletch_talon said:
xDarc said:
Eddie the head said:
If you are going to accuse some of a fallacy at least make sure they did it.
He did:

JazzJack2 said:
Also just so you know cancer rates are going because people are living longer (age is the biggest risk factor for cancer)
Actually, he didn't:

JazzJack2 said:
Except we have causation, the effects of age on cancer vulnerability are very well documented.
Read the bold.
He did because what you bolded is irrelevant. Cancer rates are up, across the board, amongst all age groups. To say that cancer is up because people are living longer is absolutely implying correlation/causation. The group think here is absolutely ridiculous.
 

Woodsey

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idarkphoenixi said:
but nobody is getting hurt if you think everything just popped into existence. But with vaccines, peoples lives are actually at stake. I can't imagine how many children might have died because of these nut-jobs.
Pretty sure ingrained ignorance is bad for everyone's future, even if it doesn't take an obvious physical effect.
 

fletch_talon

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Nov 6, 2008
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xDarc said:
He did because what you bolded is irrelevant. Cancer rates are up, across the board, amongst all age groups. To say that cancer is up because people are living longer is absolutely implying correlation/causation. The group think here is absolutely ridiculous.
The part I've bolded there is irrelevant to what your responding to actually.
If that's your argument, then argue that and provide your proof.

To get back on the topic that we (that is, you, myself and Eddie) were discussing: the fact remains that JazzJack did not make a correlation = causation fallacy because he claims that there is evidence beyond the correlation which shows that there is causation.
 

Xanadu84

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SecondPrize said:
There's a lot of ground between "vaccines don't do anything and cause all of the autism" and "vaccines save everybody and have never hurt anyone." This is one of those debates that have been going on a while where the most vocal participants are firmly entrenched on one side or the other. I think vaccines are great and there are also dangers associated with them.
To be fair, there is the risk of a false dichotomy here. If "Vaccines don't do anything/cause all the autism" is a 100, and "Vaccines save everyone and never hurt anyone" was a 1, then yes, its a shame that everyone chooses either 100 or 1. But the truth of the matter is that there is a reasonable discussion to be had over whether or not the reality of the situation is as low as 1, or as high as 3. You start getting into people arguing for a 4 or 5, and you start dealing with people who are just factually wrong.
 

EvilRoy

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xDarc said:
thaluikhain said:
But in general, yeah, the bullshit about vaccines really pisses me off.
Did you watch the video I posted? It's an interview with one of the scientists who made more vaccines than anyone else on earth concerned about undetected cancer causing viruses in the vaccines at Merck, the company he worked for. The problem with vaccines is what else finds their way into them that nobody bothers do serious research on. One of the polio vaccines was recalled over this in 1961.

How do you know today's vaccines are safe? You don't.
Are you seriously attempting to reference a video that has clearly been edited in order to elicit the most hysterical response possible as a credible source?

As this interview is going on, in the background while I type this I actually started to recognize it. We listened to it during an ethics discussion during my masters program. This is an interview regarding the start point for aids, and links it to unethical business practices with regards to animal test subject aquisition, incubating and testing procedures. Oh, the instant they started to get to the pertinent parts of the interview where the failures in ethical practices were discussed we cut away. And back to a couple more quotes out of context. And away again.
 

NiPah

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xDarc said:
The vaccines kids get today are not the ones I got in 1982-86. It's obvious that vaccines prevent disease, but it's also obvious that kids today are increasingly defective- not just with autism, but you never used to hear shit about peanut allergies or gluten intolerance either. Then you have have cancer being up 20% from 1990-2000 and expected to be up another 50% by 2020.

So maybe... something is very wrong.
We're living longer, getting better access to preventative testing, people with cancer are living much longer then before, and we have much better record keeping. Also on the notion of food allergies;
Probably half of the people who report that they have a food allergy don?t,
-Dr. Marc Riedl, assistant professor of clinical immunology and allergy at UCLA
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/need-to-know/health/the-rising-rate-of-food-allergies-2/1513/

For the love of all that is good, lets not connect vaccines to those scary closet shadows, we should actively pursue what the cause of these increased diagnoses are but don't tie it into vaccines until you know damn well they are the cause.
 

Jedi-Hunter4

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Although I have criticized the NHS allot here in the UK, it is one of the perks of having a nationalized health service working on a budjet, they don't splash out on things unless it works, it's safe and will have a dramatic benefit for as many people as possible. They have no motive to give you something that does not work, non-profit ftw.

I've been vaccinated with all the usual stuff and I've not been struck down with a horrendous leathal illness, so I take it they are doing a decent job on the vaccination front.

You only have to have a very rudimentary knowledge of biology, essentially to the level of a 15 year old to understand how vaccines work, it's not even up for debate, vaccines work, how much benefit certain one's bring is another issue, but without doubt they work, any other opinion is essentially born out of ignorance.

Raggedstar said:
It's not unusual for me to be reactive to vaccines, but even after collapsing not too long afterward on other vaccines, doctors respond with a resounding "meh". The ones I had the biggest reactions with were Hepatitis B and the one I mentioned first was MMR (measels, mumps, rubella), both are common vaccines to give children. Considering the reactions I get and the fact that no one seems to be giving a damn, you better fucking believe I'm upset.
Without trying to sound too un-empathetic, but whats even an hour of discomfort compared to getting Hepatitis B? That's probably where the lack of empathy of from the doctors is coming from.

lacktheknack said:
xDarc said:
The vaccines kids get today are not the ones I got in 1982-86. It's obvious that vaccines prevent disease, but it's also obvious that kids today are increasingly defective- not just with autism, but you never used to hear shit about peanut allergies or gluten intolerance either. Then you have have cancer being up 20% from 1990-2000 and expected to be up another 50% by 2020.

So maybe... something is very wrong.
Well, you can blame it on vaccines... or you could blame it on dozens of other factors.

Obesity, for instance. There is a big link between obesity and cancer.

In fact, I'd say that's MUCH more likely of a culprit than vaccines.
There's also the simple fact that people are living longer, Cancer never used to be a significant killer and has become more and more prevalent due to the simple fact that there are less things killing us these days, there are literally 10's of illnesses that even 75 years ago were out and out lethal that today can be remedied in simple or even routine operations or antibiotics.

It's not Cancer I'm worried about, Stroke and Heart disease. Compare the mortality rate of under 75's with Cancer and if you are like me you will be surprised how little publicity the dangers they pose get compared to Cancer. I was really shocked, even overall circulatory issues are the leading cause of death in the UK.
 

Sectan

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Aug 7, 2011
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Well one of the main spokespersons for some anti vaccine group said her child got autism from his vaccines. Only kicker is "He got over it" so that shows how credible it is.

I'd hate to see kids start getting polio, measles, mumps and all that shit. There's a reason we still use vaccines today. Because they work.
 

Bluestorm83

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People believe all sorts of retarded things. And I don't mean spiritually or morally, I mean they believe stupid bullshit that has no basis in reality OR any moral significance. I mean, something like a Religion, even if its not "real" it can make you a better person. Not that stuff.

What I mean are things like:

"Let's go steal the magic!" During the riots against former Egyptian President Mubarak, looters broke into the national museum over there and ransacked countless Egyptian historical treasures, searching for "Magic Red Mercury." Wow. In the year 2012. MAGICAL RED MERCURY.
"Medical Science is inherently sinful; only God can cure a disease!" This is moronic. If only God can cure a disease, and Doctors routinely cure diseases, isn't it rather obvious that they have God's sanction and support? And is there any rule that you have to stop praying if you bring a sick person do a doctor? You do the prayer, Doctor does the medicine, don't see any conflict.
"The Political Party that disagrees with me is EVIL!" Really? It's not at all possible that you and they simply have different points of view? You REALLY think that they all get together and chuckle sinistery about keeping minorities oppressed (people believe this about both Republicans AND Democrats. If both parties are a shadowy cabal to keep minorities oppressed, then they're REALLY ineffective, when you consider the president's genetic heritage.) This isn't DC Comics, and people who disagree with you aren't the Legion of Doom.
"Eating Meat is Morally Wrong, and its my duty to tell you about it all the time!" Then why do we have forward facing eyes and canine teeth? We're built to be predators; means that when I get hungry, somethin' DEAD. You want to abstain, go right ahead, that's your right. I'm gonna go fry me up some Deer Cutlets.
"Men or Women are clearly the Dominant Gender!" I call simple bullshit on this one, since if you remove one of them, you also remove the other. This is like saying that Water would still be Water if it was only Hydrogen or only Oxygen.
"Dear Leader is a God on Earth!" Really, North Korea? Is that why your people live in squalor while in America, even the poorest of us can afford to be FAT???

The list can go on forever. Basically, there's no shortage of stupid idiotic things that people believe. And honestly, ANY belief without thought is indicative of morons. That's what Morons do. They refuse to think. They spit back the "facts" that people once told them that they never questioned. These could be "facts" about religion or about science. I've seen just as many people who spout junk science that was disproved a decade ago as people who spout junk religion to justify their own sexism/racism/alcoholism/what have you.

Just think. Think about everything you say, everything you know, everything you hear, and everything you believe.
 

Niccolo

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xDarc said:
The vaccines kids get today are not the ones I got in 1982-86. It's obvious that vaccines prevent disease, but it's also obvious that kids today are increasingly defective- not just with autism, but you never used to hear shit about peanut allergies or gluten intolerance either. Then you have have cancer being up 20% from 1990-2000 and expected to be up another 50% by 2020.

So maybe... something is very wrong.
What's wrong is kids are growing up in successively cleaner environments. If you grow up without playing in the dirt, wrestling with dogs, 'accidentally' eating bugs and stuff, then your immune system ends up about as effective as bubble wrap is against a handgun. But now it's all antibacterial this and super-hygenic that. Kids NEED to be exposed to stuff to get a decent immune system.

And on peanut allergies... if you grow up without being exposed to a certain protein, your body is far more likely to believe that it's something dangerous. Sometimes it's there from the start, but that's mostly because kids who used to die of allergies are now surviving long enough to breed, so the genes are moving on and spreading.

Cancer: The longer you live, the more likely you are to get it. And in an increasingly industrialised world, there are more pollutants... There are also far better tests for detecting cancer. What would have been missed 15 years ago is found today.

Mental disorders: Again, same thing. We increase our understanding and the signs become more obvious. But there's also a lot of scared parents with a need to pigeonhole, so /too many/ people get labelled autistic.
 

Brotha Desmond

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Jan 3, 2011
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While I do believe that you don't really need all the shots you get, there are times when they are necessary: curing polio, the chicken pox vaccine, the tetanus shot.
Besides it's absurd to think that it can do mind control. If that was the case then my secret organization would- wait. I mean, what secret organization?
 

Eddie the head

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xDarc said:
Eddie the head said:
Also quit quote mining.
How about you read the thread and quit jumping on my back with everyone else?
I have. You just lack any forum of logic. For example.

xDarc said:
He did because what you bolded is irrelevant. Cancer rates are up, across the board, amongst all age groups. To say that cancer is up because people are living longer is absolutely implying correlation/causation. The group think here is absolutely ridiculous.
Argument form fallacy, even if he was using a fallacy it doesn't make what you said right. Also it's a Strawman, because his point is there is research to imply a link. Not that there is correlation so there is a link.

fletch_talon said:
The part I've bolded there is irrelevant to what your responding to actually.
If that's your argument, then argue that and provide your proof.

To get back on the topic that we (that is, you, myself and Eddie) were discussing: the fact remains that JazzJack did not make a correlation = causation fallacy because he claims that there is evidence beyond the correlation which shows that there is causation.
Thank you.
 

Tono Makt

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Mar 24, 2012
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xDarc said:
The vaccines kids get today are not the ones I got in 1982-86. It's obvious that vaccines prevent disease, but it's also obvious that kids today are increasingly defective- not just with autism, but you never used to hear shit about peanut allergies or gluten intolerance either. Then you have have cancer being up 20% from 1990-2000 and expected to be up another 50% by 2020.

So maybe... something is very wrong.
People gettin' old, dude, and old dudes (and dudettes) are more likely to have cancer. Also, people (well, women mostly - men don't seem to have the same sorts of issues when it comes to fathering kids later in life) are waiting until they're old to have kids - mid to late 30's, kids of these folks are tending to have more health issues than kids of younger parents. Then you factor in all of the chemicals we've got around us every day of our lives (for most urban dwellers, anyway), the dramatic change in lifestyle (we're essentially becoming a sedentary species thanks to the Industrial Revolution, going from Farmer/Tradesman to Cubicle Dweller over the past 200 years and we're doing this to our kids from an extremely early age, plopping them down in front of the TV to let Barney entertain them for a few hours, giving them video games to play and above all else, keeping them inside and away from "danger") and the vastly higher caloric intake thanks to having way more food than we used to (and the terrible things we put in the food to make it tasty and well preserved).

There's a heck of a lot going on here. Yeah, something is incredibly wrong, but vaccines are waaaaay down on the list of things going wrong.
 

Stryc9

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Nov 12, 2008
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xDarc said:
The vaccines kids get today are not the ones I got in 1982-86. It's obvious that vaccines prevent disease, but it's also obvious that kids today are increasingly defective- not just with autism, but you never used to hear shit about peanut allergies or gluten intolerance either. Then you have have cancer being up 20% from 1990-2000 and expected to be up another 50% by 2020.

So maybe... something is very wrong.
If you're gonna make out that peanut allergies and gluten intolerance are the fault of vaccines then I get to say that it's because of this craze that started in the 90's where parents were bringing their kids home to the closest thing the average person can get to a sterile clean room. People are deathly afraid to bring their kids into any sort of environment that might possibly contain even one germ and as a result of this their immune systems aren't getting the practice they need and we're getting sicker kids with some interesting conditions.

OT:
I find this whole anti-vaccination thing to be absolutely stupid and a danger to society. There are diseases coming back that have rarely been seen in decades because parents aren't getting their kids vaccinated against them and then getting waivers allowing them to go to school without their shots. They all claim either that the shots will with 100% certainty give their kids autism or in the case of some of the crazier ones the vaccines are full of mind control chemicals so that the government can indoctrinate the kids better in the liberal school system all hail Obama and the New World Order. Meanwhile before you know it we're gonna end up with mutations of diseases like measles that are resistant to the current vaccinations and end up with an epidemic on our hands. I'm sure it'll be great when Super Polio comes out because some bunch of dipshits didn't get their kids vaccinated against it and spread it to all their friends that did get their shots and they develop the mutated form of it.
 

Kurt Cristal

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Yeah, I tend to avoid the flu-shot because I feel it'll weaken your immune system [citation needed], but yeah, some vaccines are a must.