Message from @Teddy

Discord ID: 625797602356494336


2019-09-23 20:19:49 UTC  

the proof is the graph where you see the huge decline in death tolls in the US before vaccines

2019-09-23 20:20:10 UTC  

i could ask you the same thing, so take the graph - 1 day before the vaccines and compare that to africa, what's the difference

2019-09-23 20:20:20 UTC  

i really dont care about debating the legitimacy of identity. it's like telling a group of bricks that they aren't sticks @Lil Knaffe

2019-09-23 20:20:22 UTC  

rich country and sanitation vs poor country and lack of sanitation

2019-09-23 20:21:59 UTC  

That's the problem, we live in a rich country with good sanitation yet vaccines are still mandatory. You can see most viruses got widely eradicated in the 1950s-1960s where vaccination wasn't widely used as it is now.

2019-09-23 20:22:52 UTC  

Diseases like measles can have life long effects to the body and brain, especially in young children, when not vaccinated. The contraction rates went down once the vaccination was widespread. Sadly, we are having some measles outbreaks due to a lot of misconceptions about vaccines.

2019-09-23 20:23:56 UTC  

yeah exactly @Teddy

2019-09-23 20:23:59 UTC  

False, it went down before vaccination was widespread. You can compare vaccination population rate and virus population rate. You would see it does not match

2019-09-23 20:24:40 UTC  

Vaccination took the credit for what was sanitation job.

2019-09-23 20:26:51 UTC  

Wrong

2019-09-23 20:28:14 UTC  

Someone who actually shares their sources

2019-09-23 20:28:17 UTC  

Impressive

2019-09-23 20:28:54 UTC  

Please, take the time to compare vaccination population rate and the viruses eradication statistics. That source had no statistics what so ever.

2019-09-23 20:29:55 UTC  

Cases went down AFTER the vaccine was licensed in 1963

2019-09-23 20:31:14 UTC  

That's not the point, vaccination wasn't widely used back in the 1950s-1960s where most viruses got widely eradicated.

2019-09-23 20:52:48 UTC  

From 1965-1968, cases of measles dropped from over 450,000 to under 50,000. This was after the 1963 licensing of the vaccine.

You aren’t incorrect that sanitation plays a factor, but the numbers indicate that the drop happened after the vaccine had started being dispersed.

2019-09-23 20:54:05 UTC  

Which came first, ranch or cool ranch?

2019-09-23 20:55:28 UTC  

asking the important questions

2019-09-23 20:55:34 UTC  

Definition of Hydrophobic

The word hydrophobic comes from the Greek roots hydro- (meaning water) and -phobia (meaning fearing or hating). The word hydrophobic describes the fact that nonpolar substances don't combine with water molecules. Let's take a closer look at that definition. Water is a polar molecule, which means that it carries a partial charge between its atoms. Oxygen, as an electronegative atom, draws the electrons of each bond closer to its core, thus creating a more negative charge. Therefore, any materials with a charge, be it negative or positive, will be able to interact with water molecules to dissolve. (Think of how salt dissolves in water. This is due to the charges of the ions sodium and chlorine.)

So essentially, hydrophobic molecules are molecules that do not have a charge, meaning they are non-polar. By lacking a charge, these molecules do not have any charge-to-charge interactions that will allow them to interact with water. Hydrophobic materials often do not dissolve in water or in any solution that contains a largely aqueous (watery) environment. This characteristic of being hydrophobic - or non-polar - is important for many of the molecules found in nature, in other organisms, and even within our own bodies.

2019-09-23 20:56:15 UTC  

The vaccination got licensed but what was the % of people that were vaccinated in 1950s-1960s?

2019-09-23 20:56:44 UTC  

Not that high, it was more sanitation that did the trick

2019-09-23 20:57:32 UTC  

yeah i wasn't going to get technical but essentially everything has a cohesive or ionic bond and where the ionic bond becomes stronger than the cohesive bond is when something gets wet, something hydrophobic will have a much stronger cohesive bond than water's ionic bonds, it will therefore never get wet

2019-09-23 20:57:45 UTC  

water in itself is ionic, thereby making it wet

2019-09-23 20:58:44 UTC  

By lacking a charge, these molecules do not have any charge-to-charge interactions that will allow them to interact with water.

2019-09-23 20:58:52 UTC  

It cant be dry so it wont be wet

2019-09-23 20:59:04 UTC  

For something to be wet it has to be able to be dry

2019-09-23 20:59:34 UTC  

if something cant interact with water, it cant get wet

2019-09-23 21:01:26 UTC  

What's the best fast food burger?

2019-09-23 21:01:31 UTC  

I'm going with Wendy's.

2019-09-23 21:01:57 UTC  

5 guys all the way

2019-09-23 21:02:05 UTC  

Homemade

2019-09-23 21:02:13 UTC  

5 guys is too salty imo

2019-09-23 21:02:14 UTC  

Otherwise deffo 5 guys

2019-09-23 21:02:31 UTC  

It's also too expensive.

2019-09-23 21:02:51 UTC  

We dont even have wendys here

2019-09-23 21:03:07 UTC  

Burger King is actually pretty good.

2019-09-23 21:03:17 UTC  

Much better than McDonalds.

2019-09-23 21:03:33 UTC  

Nah

2019-09-23 21:03:43 UTC  

All are horrible n tasteless

2019-09-23 21:03:53 UTC  

Except those McDonald's fries