seems like the beginning of an awkward porno
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Congratulations Anti-vaxers. Measles spreading in California
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Another day reading posts here and feeling older.
Yes, when we were younger we were sent to a Chickenpox party and it worked.
But reading about those groups in TEXAS is kind of encouraging.
Conservative groups supporting choice in terms of their children.
Maybe they'll see the connection and thereafter the light.It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O
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Originally posted by I AM MOBIUS View PostChickpea!?
Give the man who is always wrong and can't spell a smart phone with autocorrect - even more hilarity than usual ensues!
Dude, maybe the touchscreen is too small? They're getting bigger at such a rate that it won't be long before a 48" model comes out...Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by DinoDoc View PostThe troll grew boring after you essentially said the polio and smallpox vaccines were bad for humanity.
Originally posted by Dr Strangelove View PostAs I said, the new polio-like enterovirus didn't evolve from the polio virus, it evolved from a completely different enterovirus. The polio vaccine only affects our immunity against the polio virus, not against other enteroviruse. Therefore the polio vaccine had nothing to do with the evolution of this new virus. Vaccines don't spread organisms around, vectors do that.
Originally posted by Pedotard View PostYou mean like white people being less vulnerable to smallpox than native americans? White people aren't actually immune to smallpox, genetics just plays a role in determining how vulnerable you are to various diseases and native americans didn't have smallpox plagues in their evolutionary history.
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Originally posted by Berzerker View PostSome people are immune, others have varying levels of immunity, and some have little or no protection. As you explain, many, many native americans didn't have that protection - probably because smallpox was an old world disease related to the domestication of animals after they migrated away. Their "herd immunity" was extremely low, so what happens after 10,000 years of vaccinations? A much larger population of vulnerable people.
(I assume this point was so obvious because you were feeling desperate to yank more chains; if so, you got me with your mad acting-like-a-dumbass skills)
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Originally posted by Berzerker View PostIf you inject a bug into people you are spreading organisms around"I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!
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