ChiefsPlanet Mobile
View Poll Results: Vaccine(s) coming mid-December...
I'll be the first in line if possible 91 37.76%
I'll get one but I'll wait a month or two to see who croaks 56 23.24%
Like any software or game system, never take 1.0... I'll wait until summer 30 12.45%
If no one's dead by next Thanksgiving, count me in 18 7.47%
No. ****ing. Way. 46 19.09%
Voters: 241. You may not vote on this poll
Page 35 of 38
« First < 253132333435 363738 >
Nzoner's Game Room>Will you take the vaccine?
JD10367 03:40 PM 11-23-2020
I don't think this needs to go to DC because it's an apolitical question, more about how much you trust Big Pharma.
[Reply]
TLO 07:23 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by JakeF:
It's weird that each trial had exactly 4 cases of Bell's palsy. Sounds very suspicious, like they didn't want to favor one vaccine or the other so they lied and said both vaccines had exactly the same.
Shut the fuck up.
[Reply]
JakeF 07:25 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by TLO:
Shut the fuck up.
Fuck yourself up the ass with a stick coated with antifreeze.
[Reply]
TLO 07:27 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by JakeF:
**** yourself up the ass with a stick coated with antifreeze.
Thank you. I'll take that under consideration.
[Reply]
FloridaMan88 08:07 PM 12-15-2020
Governor DeSantis said today mass vaccine drive thru stations will be available to the general public here in Florida as soon as February.
[Reply]
BigRedChief 08:27 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by 'Hamas' Jenkins:
Welp, here is is:

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.105...=featured_home

What that means: although not definitive, protective benefits are likely even after the first injection
don’t tell our damn governor or he will order 1 dose for everyone only.
[Reply]
MahomesMagic 08:35 PM 12-15-2020

Thoughtful email from a researcher who has been part of #SARS-Cov-2 vaccine trials - he thinks 60 is a decent cutoff age to encourage people to get the vaccine, and compares the side effects to the shingles vaccine (which of course is not mandatory or particularly widely used). pic.twitter.com/LtGxlOlF0q

— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) December 15, 2020

[Reply]
007 09:01 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by MahomesMagic:

I got chicken pox in my thirties. Decided to get the shingles vaccine at 50 because my dad has told me the stories of his bout with shingles. The first shot was nothing. The second shot hit me like a fucking truck. Don't particularly want to go through that again.
[Reply]
eDave 09:15 PM 12-15-2020
I'm getting mine so I can go to another Above & Beyond show.


[Reply]
Titty Meat 09:16 PM 12-15-2020
Inject that shit into my deltoid let's go
[Reply]
HonestChieffan 09:16 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by 007:
I got chicken pox in my thirties. Decided to get the shingles vaccine at 50 because my dad has told me the stories of his bout with shingles. The first shot was nothing. The second shot hit me like a ****ing truck. Don't particularly want to go through that again.

Beats the fuck all out of the shingles
[Reply]
007 09:19 PM 12-15-2020
Originally Posted by HonestChieffan:
Beats the fuck all out of the shingles

It does and I don't regret that. But that's a proven vaccine with tons of data too support it. I want to see real world stats on the general public before taking this one in stage one.
[Reply]
MahomesMagic 07:31 AM 12-16-2020

this whole new bugbear of "even if you are vaccinated, we do not know if you can spread it asymptomatically" is outlandish.

yes, we do know. no, you do not spread it.

household 2ndary attack rate for asympt is 0.7%, 96% lower than symptomatic at 18%.https://t.co/cxF91ErfY1

— el gato malo (@boriquagato) December 15, 2020

[Reply]
Msmith 07:40 AM 12-16-2020
My son is a nurse in a hospital in Indy. He will take the shot. When we asked him why and he replied that the vaccine needs enough sample to get the result.
[Reply]
lewdog 07:45 AM 12-16-2020
Originally Posted by MahomesMagic:
Yes, and I agree with that. Asymptomatic spread is absolutely a lot less than symptomatic spread, which is why getting a large portion of the population vaccinated, along with some rolling immunity from naturally getting the virus, can slow this spread fairly quickly in 2021. And the study also states what should be common knowledge by now, that household transmission in the leading cause of further spread, more so that community acquired.


From article:

Originally Posted by :
The findings of this study suggest that households are and will continue to be important venues for transmission, even where community transmission is reduced. Prevention strategies, such as increased mask-wearing at home, improved ventilation, voluntary isolation at external facilities, and targeted antiviral prophylaxis, should be further explored.

[Reply]
neech 08:39 AM 12-16-2020
Originally Posted by BigRedChief:
don’t tell our damn governor or he will order 1 dose for everyone only.
You're opposed to taking the vaccine then?
[Reply]
Page 35 of 38
« First < 253132333435 363738 >
Up