Misinformation about COVID and COVID vaccines still irks me, but I try to read points of view that I disagree with instead of shutting everything out
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In fact, think back of all the effective base vaccines. Like - such against tetanus or so. Why could people grow into positions of suspecting vaccinations to rather kill them than be useful to them? It's because, if enough people are vaccinated, some diseases or bacterial infections literally die out; don't occur that often anymore in society. - And so people tend to become victim to the fallacy that the viruses and bacterial infections don't exist at all.
If you let those parts of the world were most people are vaccinated against those long-known diseases which can be best prevented through vaccinations during childhood (or cyclically, like in the case of the tetanus vaccination, which needs to be refreshed every 10 years) grow back to a state where most people haven received these basic vaccines - then those diseases and bacterial infections would return (as they haven't disappeared all around the world). And people would die from them again. - Or walk away from them with life-lasting physical damages.
Then it would become visible, these base vaccines haven't been created to poison people or kill them, to do evil to them, but to erase a couple of ways how people could die from rather trivial causes... And that these viruses and specific bacterial infections which the base vaccines target at DO exist. Even if human eyes can't see them.
Please, don't be dramatic... PTSD is something very different.
Taking this care is just a measure of common sense. Leaving the rational part of the brain switched on while following one's instincts - instead of getting fully occupied by one's instincts.
But... just a little annotation here. When can you do such "Who can take the most?"-games? ...If you do it with people you know and those people are highly reliable. Then you can have gangbangs, but without the known risks that strangers bring with them... ;-)
Why could people grow into positions of suspecting vaccinations to rather kill them than be useful to them?
It's because, if enough people are vaccinated, some diseases or bacterial infections literally die out; don't occur that often anymore in society. - And so people tend to become victim to the fallacy that the viruses and bacterial infections don't exist at all.
If you let those parts of the world were most people are vaccinated against those long-known diseases which can be best prevented through vaccinations during childhood (or cyclically, like in the case of the tetanus vaccination, which needs to be refreshed every 10 years) grow back to a state where most people haven received these basic vaccines - then those diseases and bacterial infections would return (as they haven't disappeared all around the world). And people would die from them again. - Or walk away from them with life-lasting physical damages.
Then it would become visible, these base vaccines haven't been created to poison people or kill them, to do evil to them, but to erase a couple of ways how people could die from rather trivial causes...
And that these viruses and specific bacterial infections which the base vaccines target at DO exist. Even if human eyes can't see them.
Please, don't be dramatic... PTSD is something very different.
Taking this care is just a measure of common sense.
Leaving the rational part of the brain switched on while following one's instincts - instead of getting fully occupied by one's instincts.
But... just a little annotation here.
When can you do such "Who can take the most?"-games?
...If you do it with people you know and those people are highly reliable.
Then you can have gangbangs, but without the known risks that strangers bring with them... ;-)
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