Swammerdami
Squadron Leader
I've heard those cards are selling for 450 bucks a piece. The vaccine is free. Morons.
Owning the libs? Priceless.
Give them a little credit. They only buy the cards when told $100 of the $450 goes to Trump's "PAC."
I've heard those cards are selling for 450 bucks a piece. The vaccine is free. Morons.
Owning the libs? Priceless.
I am looking for the science of what happens with the complete immune response (which antibodies/t-cells are present in each part of the body) of a natural infection compared to vaccines.
With this data in hand then modeling of the pandemic can be a lot more accurate.
Potential misuses of this data by politically motivated or paranoid chuckleheads is no excuse to not gather the data in the first place.
The govt. has that power. 1905, Massachusetts vs. Jacobson, the Supremes said:I don't want to give the government power to enforce injections of anything.
This was about smallpox. Board of Health had this weird idea that vaccinating everyone was in the interest of "promoting the general welfare" as mentioned in the Constitution's preamble.It is within the police power of a State to enact a compulsory vaccination law, and it is for the legislature, and not for the courts, to determine.
The govt. has that power. 1905, Massachusetts vs. Jacobson, the Supremes said:I don't want to give the government power to enforce injections of anything.
This was about smallpox. Board of Health had this weird idea that vaccinating everyone was in the interest of "promoting the general welfare" as mentioned in the Constitution's preamble.It is within the police power of a State to enact a compulsory vaccination law, and it is for the legislature, and not for the courts, to determine.
The govt. has that power. 1905, Massachusetts vs. Jacobson, the Supremes said:
This was about smallpox. Board of Health had this weird idea that vaccinating everyone was in the interest of "promoting the general welfare" as mentioned in the Constitution's preamble.
I don't care.
I don't confuse the legal with the moral.
I still don't want the government to have that much power in the 21st century. There are better avenues.
Tom
The govt. has that power. 1905, Massachusetts vs. Jacobson, the Supremes said:
This was about smallpox. Board of Health had this weird idea that vaccinating everyone was in the interest of "promoting the general welfare" as mentioned in the Constitution's preamble.
I don't care.
I don't confuse the legal with the moral.
I still don't want the government to have that much power in the 21st century. There are better avenues.
Tom
So, letting significant numbers become petri dishes to breed vaccine-defeating variants of the plague is more moral than forcing vaccinations?
Freedom as a suicide pact is the superior choice in your mind?
I don't care.
I don't confuse the legal with the moral.
I still don't want the government to have that much power in the 21st century. There are better avenues.
Tom
So, letting significant numbers become petri dishes to breed vaccine-defeating variants of the plague is more moral than forcing vaccinations?
Freedom as a suicide pact is the superior choice in your mind?
That isn't at all what I said.
There are better ways to get people vaccinated than giving the government that much power.
Tom
So, letting significant numbers become petri dishes to breed vaccine-defeating variants of the plague is more moral than forcing vaccinations?
Freedom as a suicide pact is the superior choice in your mind?
That isn't at all what I said.
There are better ways to get people vaccinated than giving the government that much power.
Tom
It is what you said. You NOW say there are better ways, but you did not enumerate them, you simply said you didn’t want the government to be able to do it.
Feel free to post again and say what you’re now saying you meant to say - we can discuss that. What avenues. What avenues are better than the government being able to make it happen?
If we're depending on education or incentives to get people to do 'the right thing,' we're competing with bad actors who are manipulating the same people into doing the wrong thing for the actors' agenda.So, letting significant numbers become petri dishes to breed vaccine-defeating variants of the plague is more moral than forcing vaccinations?
Freedom as a suicide pact is the superior choice in your mind?
That isn't at all what I said.
There are better ways to get people vaccinated than giving the government that much power.
Tom
So, how much official backup will such entities get in Florida? Nebraska?Empower private entities to enforce their own rules about vaccination and such. Lots of them do it and it works. It would work better with official backup.
Tom
In 1901 a deadly smallpox epidemic tore through the Northeast, prompting the Boston and Cambridge boards of health to order the vaccination of all residents. But some refused to get the shot, claiming the vaccine order violated their personal liberties under the Constitution.
One of those holdouts, a Swedish-born pastor named Henning Jacobson, took his anti-vaccine crusade all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The nation's top justices issued a landmark 1905 ruling that legitimized the government’s authority to “reasonably” infringe upon personal freedoms during a public health crisis by issuing a fine to those who refused vaccination.
The broader battle over the validity of vaccination science reached a fever pitch during the smallpox outbreak. Anti-vaccination groups, citing alleged cases of death and deformity from bad reactions to smallpox vaccine, called compulsory vaccination “the greatest crime of the age,” claiming that it “slaughtertens of thousands of innocent children.”
In response, newspaper editorials characterized the smallpox vaccination controversy as “a conflict between intelligence and ignorance, civilization and barbarism.” The New York Times dismissed anti-vaccine activists as “a familiar species of cranks” who were “deficient in the power to judge [science].”
The Supreme Court rejected Jacobson’s argument and dealt the anti-vaccination movement a stinging loss. Writing for the majority, Justice John Marshall Harlan acknowledged the fundamental importance of personal freedom, but also recognized that “the rights of the individual in respect of his liberty may at times, under the pressure of great dangers, be subjected to such restraint, to be enforced by reasonable regulations, as the safety of the general public may demand.”
This decision established what became known as the “reasonableness” test. The government had the authority to pass laws that restricted individual liberty, if those restrictions—including the punishment for violating them—were found by the Court to be a reasonable means for achieving a public good.
Btw, I'm old enough to have had the smallpox vaccine as a very young child. I'm old enough to remember the polio epidemic and how thrilled we were when a vaccine was developed for that horrible disease. Sadly, there have been people who have fought against these vaccines for long, long time.
So, how much official backup will such entities get in Florida? Nebraska?
The govt. has that power. 1905, Massachusetts vs. Jacobson, the Supremes said:
This was about smallpox. Board of Health had this weird idea that vaccinating everyone was in the interest of "promoting the general welfare" as mentioned in the Constitution's preamble.
I don't care.
I don't confuse the legal with the moral.
I still don't want the government to have that much power in the 21st century. There are better avenues.
Tom
Btw, I'm old enough to have had the smallpox vaccine as a very young child. I'm old enough to remember the polio epidemic and how thrilled we were when a vaccine was developed for that horrible disease. Sadly, there have been people who have fought against these vaccines for long, long time.
My mother's uncle was an anti-vaxxer during the polio epidemic. His son got polio as a result. This led to paralysis of his legs for his whole life and many complications and a tough life in a wheelchair and a shortened life.
Okay, you distrust some of the government. Good on your father.So, how much official backup will such entities get in Florida? Nebraska?
This is apparently where we differ.
You want people like DeSantis to have the power to give you a shot whether you want it or not.
That's what giving the government that power means.
Personally, I don't trust them that much. Largely because of people like DeSantis.
Tom
We're currently living in the so called 'better avenues.' How are you liking the pandemic so far?
Now, do you know of a way to deal with the hole in the 'better avenues' scenario? Cuz it still looks like a suicide pact to me.
Small problem with this scenario.But still. I was a gay kid. I'm sure that if Governor Mike Pence could force health care choices on people, I'd have been stuck in some "reparative therapy" program(possibly run by the RCC).