Message from @MomentumZero
Discord ID: 650547004073574401
Any drug, I dont care how beneficial, would be corrupted under the current US Vac system, and the fact vaccines are a drug that cures nothing only furthers big pharma pork barreling of them.
They go through a CDC backdoor approval process from the cold war to speed approval rates.
Or it could just be that the US has a bigger population than ol' Nippon...
Here's an alternate take.
I've heard that up to 25% of pharmacy profits come from them.
The FDA and CDC are pork belly bureaucracies that enrich the politically connected at tax payer expense to marginal effect at best.
I just want to know who the patient zero was for each one of those outbreaks
Yeah but at least the FDA has hoops they have to jump through to approve a new drug.
Vaccs are drugs that often do nothing and dont even have to do that approval.
The fact that a drug hasn't spent decades caught up in their tarpit of red tape indicates that it's more modern and cutting edge than those that have.
Japan may have a smaller population than the US, but the arguement for vaccines would stem more from population density. Which you can hardly argue that the US has a lower population density than Japan. Both on average and in concentrated areas.
There's an old saying: an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
@everyonee not population density but population diversity
i will say diversity probably does do a lot for herd-immunization
Also Herd Immunity is for non-vaccinated populations.
If you're vaccinated the dangers of a common communicable disease that is very succeptible to vaccines, which measles 100% is, shoudn't be the big problem its presented as.
Daniel Salmon, the director of the Institute of Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins University, told ABC News that the involvement of a foreign individual or an American who recently traveled to a foreign country is "typically" how measles outbreaks start in the U.S.
"Most of the time we don't have indigenous transition of measles" in the U.S., Salmon said. "We do right now, but once this outbreak is taken care of, we'll have no more measles in the U.S."
Ah, those're good points @everyonee
>will not allow an invasion
they've been doing nothing *but* allowing an invasion for 5 years. I'm pressing x on them stopping now
*50 years
Operation Wetback 2.0?
Would
@Weepy
As usual, completely awful...
You don’t even like geckos?
Oh lord
we need an aussie shitposter emoji
We really do