by Chichi » Tue Jul 27, 2021 7:22 am
Oh dear @hal ! I don’t want to work you up any further than it appears I have, but per the entire point of my post, having second hand opinions (even from “a CDC epidemiologist on payroll”) doesn’t qualify you to know anything more than a second hand opinion. But as a legal Professional, I trust you know that. Or do “second hand opinions” count as evidence of expertise these days?
To answer your question, I’m double vaxxed for several good reasons. But, again, Hal, my dear mere mortal Representative of the Law, you seem to be reaching to argue that that makes me a hypocrite because I am “tenuous” on the subject. Except…I never claimed I was for or against vaccines at all. I think in your field they call that attenpt of informal fallacy Tu Quoque, no? So let’s go ahead and throw that point out too, shall we?
Now Hal, thanks very much for pointing out there are multiple vaccines in the UK. To, your question: have I “been pivotal in researching all of them?” Well… yes. My job is, quite literally, to gather enormous amounts of vaccine data, run statistics against them and submit metanalysis of the conclusions for journals. This is what has been used and will continue being used to set academic, institutional and governmental policy. I do this as part of a very large team. We don’t rely on “opinions,” because everything put to paper at this level is rigorously fact-checked multiple times pre-publication. Not only do we submit background on these Vaccines, but also Covid-19, it’s predecessors, a history of both adenovirus and mRNA vaccination, speculation on policy, recommendations on usage and the limitations of each study. In my “spare time” I also like long walks on the beach. So, yeah, I would say I know a little bit about the “multiple vaccines in the UK.”
Now Hal, please don’t be so hard on yourself. You’re not a “non-scientist thicko,” and I would never imply that. But … your comment that “unless your faith in all forms of longstanding medical expert bodies is so eroded you’d rather look to FB forums or Google for answers, then I would suggest that if you’re going to place your belief in anything, you should follow the doctors….” makes me want to sit you down and tell you a nice bedtime story about Acutane, oral contraceptives and the Opioid Crisis. I know you’re not into firsthand details Hal, but it’s basically about a whole lot of biased institutional research, big money lawyers (*coughs*) and some perfectly trustworthy medical doctors. Lateral thinking, Hal, lateral thinking.
“It seems your real objection is that I’m being judgemental!” Bravo my friend! Yes! This was my only point !
Except….you go on. You’re not judgemental, you just think that others posting pseudoscience “deprives others of their own autonomy and consent.” But then I have to ask… what do you think you’re doing by putting up THIS beauty: “Which shows that you don’t understand how vaccines work. Your ability to carry and transmit COVID is greater. Vaccination programmes also reduce the potential mutation of viruses like COVID into more virulent forms.” If you were in my position OR in yours, attempting to prove the verity of that declarative sentence in a legal battle, you would have a difficult time without fluffing the stats. You would know that it’s simply not defensible enough to put out in the name of truth. You can not call other people out for “pseudo-science” when you are, in fact yourself, spreading other people’s second hand opinions.
The only difference between you and the anti-Vax community is that you have faith in medical experts and they do not. You jump to the conclusion that they rely on pseudo-science, but actually, their beliefs may just as likely be due to personal experience with vaccines, beliefs about medical doctors, family upbringing, religion or something else. Put simply, they look at “medical” opinion as a version of pseudo-science themselves. They may have aversions to “lemming” behaviour. Whatever. The point is: None of us (including me!) are “right” to conclude anything about anything. In fact, if you do decide to read the research, you’ll see there’s an argument for BOTH pro- and anti- Vaxxing. And that’s not a bad thing. So let people choose their own version of science until we actually have something conclusive.
Oh dear @hal ! I don’t want to work you up any further than it appears I have, but per the entire point of my post, having second hand opinions (even from “a CDC epidemiologist on payroll”) doesn’t qualify you to know anything more than a second hand opinion. But as a legal Professional, I trust you know that. Or do “second hand opinions” count as evidence of expertise these days?
To answer your question, I’m double vaxxed for several good reasons. But, again, Hal, my dear mere mortal Representative of the Law, you seem to be reaching to argue that that makes me a hypocrite because I am “tenuous” on the subject. Except…I never claimed I was for or against vaccines at all. I think in your field they call that attenpt of informal fallacy [i]Tu Quoque[/i], no? So let’s go ahead and throw that point out too, shall we?
Now Hal, thanks very much for pointing out there are multiple vaccines in the UK. To, your question: have I “been pivotal in researching all of them?” Well… yes. My job is, quite literally, to gather enormous amounts of vaccine data, run statistics against them and submit metanalysis of the conclusions for journals. This is what has been used and will continue being used to set academic, institutional and governmental policy. I do this as part of a very large team. We don’t rely on “opinions,” because everything put to paper at this level is rigorously fact-checked multiple times pre-publication. Not only do we submit background on these Vaccines, but also Covid-19, it’s predecessors, a history of both adenovirus and mRNA vaccination, speculation on policy, recommendations on usage and the limitations of each study. In my “spare time” I also like long walks on the beach. So, yeah, I would say I know a little bit about the “multiple vaccines in the UK.”
Now Hal, please don’t be so hard on yourself. You’re not a “non-scientist thicko,” and I would never imply that. But … your comment that “unless your faith in all forms of longstanding medical expert bodies is so eroded you’d rather look to FB forums or Google for answers, then I would suggest that if you’re going to place your belief in anything, you should follow the doctors….” makes me want to sit you down and tell you a nice bedtime story about Acutane, oral contraceptives and the Opioid Crisis. I know you’re not into firsthand details Hal, but it’s basically about a whole lot of biased institutional research, big money lawyers (*coughs*) and some perfectly trustworthy medical doctors. Lateral thinking, Hal, lateral thinking.
“It seems your real objection is that I’m being judgemental!” Bravo my friend! Yes! This was my only point !
Except….you go on. You’re not judgemental, you just think that others posting pseudoscience “deprives others of their own autonomy and consent.” But then I have to ask… what do you think you’re doing by putting up THIS beauty: “Which shows that you don’t understand how vaccines work. Your ability to carry and transmit COVID is greater. Vaccination programmes also reduce the potential mutation of viruses like COVID into more virulent forms.” If you were in my position OR in yours, attempting to prove the verity of that declarative sentence in a legal battle, you would have a difficult time without fluffing the stats. You would know that it’s simply not defensible enough to put out in the name of truth. You can not call other people out for “pseudo-science” when you are, in fact yourself, spreading other people’s second hand opinions.
The only difference between you and the anti-Vax community is that you have faith in medical experts and they do not. You jump to the conclusion that they rely on pseudo-science, but actually, their beliefs may just as likely be due to personal experience with vaccines, beliefs about medical doctors, family upbringing, religion or something else. Put simply, they look at “medical” opinion as a version of pseudo-science themselves. They may have aversions to “lemming” behaviour. Whatever. The point is: None of us (including me!) are “right” to conclude anything about anything. In fact, if you do decide to read the research, you’ll see there’s an argument for BOTH pro- and anti- Vaxxing. And that’s [u]not[/u] a bad thing. So let people choose their own version of science until we actually have something conclusive.