Quote:
Originally Posted by Pugchief
It worked great for you because you were under the mistaken impression at the time (and maybe still) that masks, social distancing and vaccines actually did something (hand washing yes, one out of 4 isn't bad). Meanwhile, while others were "making you unsafe", it turns out they weren't. Dr Fauci admitted as much last week during congressional testimony. But your perceived sense of safety enabled you go out in public. Yes that worked for you. Others, not so much.
If there is anything we should have learned from the covid experience, it's that you can't trust the "experts" or the so-called "science", always follow the money, and that people who claim to be making you "safe" or doing something for your benefit are likely doing something for their benefit. And their benefit is more power and money.
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That conspiracy theory again? Handwashing was the *least* effective at stopping the spread. Interestingly, it is the one thing that most of us already did anyway. Was that measure of effectiveness based on numbers or was it based more on throwing a tantrum and refusing to do anything that might acknowledge the science?
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Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works.
Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so.
Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough
Last edited by Bill14564; 01-28-2024 at 03:45 PM.
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