Message from @greloom.

Discord ID: 578976064861110292


2019-05-17 15:54:08 UTC  

this comes to a phenomenon known as multiple lotteries

2019-05-17 15:55:19 UTC  

This also comes to a phenomenon called herd immunity. If you don't want to vaxx your kid, that'll be fine. The other vaxxed people can protect your kid because it spreads through no one, as they're all vaccinated.

2019-05-17 15:55:26 UTC  

furthermore the video you've provided frames the situation by calling most cases anecdotes. It looks to this with a scientific lens, not at a philosophical lens

2019-05-17 15:55:52 UTC  

how long does the immunity from a vaccine last? Even after two or more times of repetition?

2019-05-17 15:56:01 UTC  

Your entire lifetime.

2019-05-17 15:56:07 UTC  

and how is that proven?

2019-05-17 15:56:16 UTC  

Got measles as a kid?

2019-05-17 15:56:31 UTC  

Tell me if anyone here did

2019-05-17 15:57:04 UTC  

none, only where the outbreaks took place. There are outbreaks taking place in highly vaccinated communities

2019-05-17 15:59:52 UTC  

and I would still prefer having had measles as there's been research going on, showing the virus works against cancer

2019-05-17 16:00:58 UTC  

yea i had the measles mumps and chickenpox when i was a kid and so did all my friends and not one of us ever got injured from it like thee vaccines do to ppl and i will never have to worry about getting them again!!!! also if your heard immunity worked then those vaccinated would not have to worry about those un vaccinated would they. it is all a lie. plus there is proof the measles is being spread thru the vaccine https://www.naturalnews.com/2019-03-06-genetic-sequencing-science-breakthrough-just-proved-that-measles-outbreaks-are-caused-by-the-measles-vaccine.html

2019-05-17 16:01:55 UTC  

Anyone?

2019-05-17 16:02:53 UTC  

the right of taking risks should be important. Those deaths and complications took mostly place in countries where hygiene is bad and where malnutrition takes place (regularly), regardless of vaccination rate.

2019-05-17 16:03:01 UTC  

Also, yes my dude, measles vaccines DO contain the actual virus.

2019-05-17 16:03:12 UTC  

Just a weakened version of it.

2019-05-17 16:03:13 UTC  

they contain a different kind of the virus

2019-05-17 16:03:17 UTC  

^

2019-05-17 16:03:20 UTC  

Weakened version.

2019-05-17 16:03:39 UTC  

problem is that for rubella, it doesn't protect against all wild variants of rubella

2019-05-17 16:04:10 UTC  

Your body has something called memory cells, which if you ever got measles or other disease, if your body DOES win and eradicate the disease from inside the body, it'll remember that exact invader.

2019-05-17 16:04:17 UTC  

So, using this logic

2019-05-17 16:04:26 UTC  

yea you are a carrier of it and they send kids back to school the next day after getting it and you wonder why these outbreaks always happen where there are lots of kids

2019-05-17 16:04:38 UTC  

If you get invaded again by the same disease, your body knows how to beat it.

2019-05-17 16:04:41 UTC  

it is called shedding

2019-05-17 16:04:46 UTC  

These are called memory cells.

2019-05-17 16:05:02 UTC  

These guys hang out usually for your entire lifetime in the lymph nodes waiting to get activated.

2019-05-17 16:05:03 UTC  

you get the vaccine you are a carrier able to spread it

2019-05-17 16:05:16 UTC  

No, I'm not a carrier.

2019-05-17 16:05:30 UTC  

omfg did you read what i said

2019-05-17 16:05:37 UTC  

no you didnt or you ignored it

2019-05-17 16:05:56 UTC  

your a carrier for up to 4 weeks after getting the vaccine

2019-05-17 16:05:59 UTC  

Carriers usually infect others by being infected by the measles. If your body knows how to fight these, it usually gets killed in a couple of days.

2019-05-17 16:06:11 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/552285797038948364/578976569159057408/iu.png

2019-05-17 16:06:12 UTC  

Carriers usually infect others through the lungs.

2019-05-17 16:06:20 UTC  

LMAO

2019-05-17 16:06:58 UTC  

you still ignore the facts zero death from the actual measles but over 100 from the measles vaccine in the last 10 years

2019-05-17 16:07:13 UTC  

fact about this: it's in the US alone

2019-05-17 16:07:19 UTC  

what makes the difference?

2019-05-17 16:07:41 UTC  

“While global measles deaths have decreased by 84 percent worldwide in recent years — from 550,100 deaths in 2000 to 89,780 in 2016 — measles is still common in many developing countries, particularly in parts of Africa and Asia. An estimated 7 million people were affected by measles in 2016,” WHO said. Jan 22, 2019

2019-05-17 16:08:07 UTC  

the vaccine program and how many you have to get is why