Whoops, my bad. Still...it worked, didn't it?No, they didn't. That wasn't smallpox, that was another version of the polio vaccine.

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Whoops, my bad. Still...it worked, didn't it?No, they didn't. That wasn't smallpox, that was another version of the polio vaccine.
Yeah my wife and I both agree, we're going to vaccinate the hell out of our kids. She's not even pregnant yet and already her motherly "murder" instinct is kicking in regarding people who try to get her babies sick.Broomstick wrote:Yes, yes it did.
In fact, we've been so successful that people fear vaccines more than the horrible disease those vaccines prevent.
Not necessarily against a major flu pandemic, unless we make some breakthroughs. The flu mutates via two methods, antigentic shift and antigenic drift. The latter is the slow one and is somewhat predictable, allowing drug companies to come up with a vaccine every year. The former is fast which makes it harder for us to adapt vaccines. I have heard people trying to make a vaccine targeting the parts of the influenza virus which doesn't mutate, but that's still in the works.Esquire wrote:
Here's the thing: antibiotics do not work as well as they used to. Thanks to overprescription and a total lack of long-term health planning, the day when they don't work at all is all too near. When - and that's when, not if - that day comes, the only thing standing between us and a repeat of the 1918 flu pandemic will be mandatory vaccination, because left to their own devices too many people will choose to endanger themselves and others to avoid a minor inconvenience.
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Not just that, but it's more the wide scale use of antibiotics on livestock due to poor factory farm conditions, as well as some overuse by doctors for things that don't require antibiotics (My mom was a nurse and I've heard stories of kids coming in with viruses which of course cannot be treated with antibiotics whose parents would not leave without a fucking penicillin script for their brat. That does not happen anymore), but it's just going to get worse unless we start changing the way we farm meat, and really start to lessen our consumption of red meat.mr friendly guy wrote:Not necessarily against a major flu pandemic, unless we make some breakthroughs. The flu mutates via two methods, antigentic shift and antigenic drift. The latter is the slow one and is somewhat predictable, allowing drug companies to come up with a vaccine every year. The former is fast which makes it harder for us to adapt vaccines. I have heard people trying to make a vaccine targeting the parts of the influenza virus which doesn't mutate, but that's still in the works.Esquire wrote:
Here's the thing: antibiotics do not work as well as they used to. Thanks to overprescription and a total lack of long-term health planning, the day when they don't work at all is all too near. When - and that's when, not if - that day comes, the only thing standing between us and a repeat of the 1918 flu pandemic will be mandatory vaccination, because left to their own devices too many people will choose to endanger themselves and others to avoid a minor inconvenience.
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Enough with the demonization of red meat. Other forms of meat like hogs and poultry are just as subjected to antibiotics.Flagg wrote:That does not happen anymore), but it's just going to get worse unless we start changing the way we farm meat, and really start to lessen our consumption of red meat.
Hogs are red meat. I agree with you on poultry, but they are much easier to "free range" while still giving out good production. There are also health issues with red meat, but because everything dietary seems to change if not flip flop every 6 days or so...Broomstick wrote:Enough with the demonization of red meat. Other forms of meat like hogs and poultry are just as subjected to antibiotics.Flagg wrote:That does not happen anymore), but it's just going to get worse unless we start changing the way we farm meat, and really start to lessen our consumption of red meat.
I haven't seen an infant with a pierced ear since leaving FL. I love volcanoes.Broomstick wrote:A quick google shows somewhere between 100 and 200 infant circumcision deaths per year in the US and about a 5% significant complication rate.
There are about 100-150 deaths from vaccine reactions each year in the US, about 1200 hospitalizations, 400 disabilities as a result, and 288 life threatening cases. However, although based on CDC reporting mechanisms, it is not 100% certain all of those "reactions" are to the vaccine and not some other complicating factor or even unrelated problem. Even so - at worse it would seem that vaccine complications/deaths are comparable to those arising from circumcision even though far, far more vaccinations are performed each year, and children are subjected to multiple vaccinations, not just one.
Thus, I conclude that childhood vaccinations are safer than loping the foreskin off your baby boy.
Could find no stats on injuries/complications for infant ear piercing, which seems to be all the rage the these days, and which to my mind is even less justifiable than circumcision which on rare occasions can be medically justified. There's just no damn good reason to drill holes in a kid's ear.
Nice that they make such a painful and unnecessary procedure memorable. Does an Imam with herpes suckle on the kids dick to make the foreskin easier to get at to lop off, or is that just a Rabbi thing?AniThyng wrote:As far as I am aware Muslims do not circumcise until the child is 10-12 years old.
It really is just a rabbi thing, yes.Flagg wrote:Nice that they make such a painful and unnecessary procedure memorable. Does an Imam with herpes suckle on the kids dick to make the foreskin easier to get at to lop off, or is that just a Rabbi thing?AniThyng wrote:As far as I am aware Muslims do not circumcise until the child is 10-12 years old.
I'm a libertarian and I support mandatory MMR vaccinations for the same reason I support mandatory financing of fire departments: because feeding an infectious disease or fire doesn't just let it break even, you allow it to get stronger and more likely to cause harm to your neighbours. I don't support mandatory flu vaccinations yet because they are currently too narrow in scope to have a lasting effect, but once they develop one that is effective for more than a single season I'd support that too.Lord MJ wrote:Out of morbid curiosity, I've been looking at Libertarian blogs about the whole issue of vaccinations and even medical quarantines.
To my surprise there are some libertarians that do support mandatory vaccinations, but the more ideologically pure libertarians do not. And essentially view the risks associated with not being vaccinated as being risks and that nobody should be forced to to do something based on the risk that other people might get sick because someone is not vaccinated.
From my understanding, "Libertarian" encompasses an entire spectrum of beliefs - from just having a smaller government than we have now, to some sort of idealized society where force/coercion is never used as a means of getting goods/resources/capital/labor from citizens. The latter setting seems to just scream for a pandemic to sweep through and wipe the populace out, as even simple things like sanitation, health codes for restaurants, or vaccinations all require "force" in order to be effective.Lord MJ wrote:Out of morbid curiosity, I've been looking at Libertarian blogs about the whole issue of vaccinations and even medical quarantines.
To my surprise there are some libertarians that do support mandatory vaccinations, but the more ideologically pure libertarians do not. And essentially view the risks associated with not being vaccinated as being risks and that nobody should be forced to to do something based on the risk that other people might get sick because someone is not vaccinated.
Huh?Broomstick wrote:Could find no stats on injuries/complications for infant ear piercing, which seems to be all the rage the these days, and which to my mind is even less justifiable than circumcision
Are you referring to circumcision or other non-cosmetic modifications?but child mutilation needs to be banned.
The most ideologically pure libertarian would say that the free market would take care of things like sanitation. And that there shouldn't be such a thing as health codes for restaurants (and that the free market would penalize restaurants that do not maintain some level of health standards), and that private institutions are free to require vaccinations for people to be on their premises, and that someone can go without vaccinations and still not get sick or infect others.biostem wrote:From my understanding, "Libertarian" encompasses an entire spectrum of beliefs - from just having a smaller government than we have now, to some sort of idealized society where force/coercion is never used as a means of getting goods/resources/capital/labor from citizens. The latter setting seems to just scream for a pandemic to sweep through and wipe the populace out, as even simple things like sanitation, health codes for restaurants, or vaccinations all require "force" in order to be effective.Lord MJ wrote:Out of morbid curiosity, I've been looking at Libertarian blogs about the whole issue of vaccinations and even medical quarantines.
To my surprise there are some libertarians that do support mandatory vaccinations, but the more ideologically pure libertarians do not. And essentially view the risks associated with not being vaccinated as being risks and that nobody should be forced to to do something based on the risk that other people might get sick because someone is not vaccinated.
Circumcision these days is largely done for cosmetic or religious reasons.Borgholio wrote:Are you referring to circumcision or other non-cosmetic modifications?but child mutilation needs to be banned.
Let me explain this more thoroughly:Irbis wrote:Huh?Broomstick wrote:Could find no stats on injuries/complications for infant ear piercing, which seems to be all the rage the these days, and which to my mind is even less justifiable than circumcision![]()
Not that I like it either, as I am generally against doing anything to kids they might later object on basis of common sense/science, but do you honestly call something that can reverse on its own and is barely more painful than injection worse than permanent (sensory) mutilation? Really?
Maybe child piercings should be banned, especially ones done for religious reasons, but child mutilation needs to be banned.
You can say the same about amputating someone's leg. If there are edge cases where circumcision is medically justifiable, that only justifies doing it in those edge cases.Batman wrote:So...are there any actual medical 'benefits' to earlobe piercing? Because so far it looks like circumcision is at least occasionally beneficial...