Thanks for this. I started reading this article, and when I got to this point, I had to break out and comment on it.Crazy Harry said:https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/how-to-talk-to-coronavirus-skeptics

Z4C_er said:I don't deny that the Coronavirus exists, I question the mechanisms that have been put in place that go against a normal persons view of logic and reasonable amounts of governance.
That's OK! Most people blindly trust what's going on. I don't.ronk said:![]()
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I think no matter what academic evidence is given for the vaccine- the anti vax brigade have made their decision and they won’t be convinced otherwise
I give up !
PVR posted the the question:-
Will you take the COVID jab
Tö Date 72% have said YES
And only 11% have said NO

I have a question for you: if I blocked you from responding to me and refused to discuss anything with you, what would you think of me?exdos said:Z4C_er said:I don't deny that the Coronavirus exists, I question the mechanisms that have been put in place that go against a normal persons view of logic and reasonable amounts of governance.
So are you saying that all the experts' advice and knowledge which have gone into the production of various vaccines and the strategic management of the pandemic (i.e. lockdown, mass vaccination etc.) is illogical to what you consider be the "normal person" (I assume you give yourself that description)?
Sorry but anticipate no vaccine no fly.Z4C_er said:It's OK, I will offer to wear a mask whilst on the plane.Nanu said:Suspect that unless you are "jabbed up" you won't be able to go on a substantial holiday. Certainly not on a plane or a cruise anyway. Like you planning driving "down south" for long country house weekends looking for somewhere to move to.ronk said:I’m not planning any substantial holiday wise until late summer - I’d like to know that I’m well jabbed up before I go away from my own home.
Looks like day trips only In early days.
Wait......... are you going to tell me masks are useless now?
You sound like a bouncer at the door of a night club.Nanu said:Sorry but anticipate no vaccine no fly.Z4C_er said:It's OK, I will offer to wear a mask whilst on the plane.Nanu said:Suspect that unless you are "jabbed up" you won't be able to go on a substantial holiday. Certainly not on a plane or a cruise anyway. Like you planning driving "down south" for long country house weekends looking for somewhere to move to.
Wait......... are you going to tell me masks are useless now?
And in that same report it states thatexdos said:Nictrix said:So do they have information on a difference of 12 weeks between doses now or is everybody that is part of the group that are being given doses 12 weeks apart part of the testing.
Unless I am missing something this info is not available yet as we are not 12 weeks into the program.
"What do the manufacturers say?
In a joint statement Pfizer and BioNTech said, “The safety and efficacy of the vaccine has not been evaluated on different dosing schedules as the majority of trial participants received the second dose within the window specified in the study design . . . There is no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose is sustained after 21 days.”
The European Medicines Agency has said that the gap between the first and second doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine should not exceed 42 days. “Any change to this would require a variation to the marketing authorisation as well as more clinical data to support such a change, otherwise it would be considered as ‘off-label use,’” the agency said."
I do hope for everybody relying on the vaccines that this approach is not a waste of time, effort and money.
See: https://www.bmj.com/content/372/bmj.n18
It states:
"The trials of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine did include different spacing between doses, finding that a longer gap (two to three months) led to a greater immune response, but the overall participant numbers were small. In the UK study 59% (1407 of 2377) of the participants who had two standard doses received the second dose between nine and 12 weeks after the first."
The government advisers aren't just making this stuff up: they're experts in their fields with specialist knowledge. Of course the C-19 in humans is novel, but the experts can see the data and compare it to the behaviours and patterns of all other known viruses and act accordingly. This is how scientific advances are made: they're not just blind leaps into the dark.
And this: https://assets.publishing.service.g...n-spc-covid-19-vaccine-astrazeneca-reg174.pdf
ronk said:![]()
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I think no matter what academic evidence is given for the vaccine- the anti vax brigade have made their decision and they won’t be convinced otherwise
I give up !
TitanTim said:The worrying thing for me is the vaccine doesn't stop you from catching Covid or passing it on and from the reaction I've seen of people who have received their first jab it's smiles and thumbs up thinking life will be back to normal soon. Question is will it. What happens if you've had the jabs and you're let loose back into society and you give the virus to someone who hasn't had the jab, regardless of age or their circumstances for not having the jab and that person dies from you passing it on. It might be someone in your family or whatever. So how does all this work out looking into the future.
Tim.
TitanTim said:The worrying thing for me is the vaccine doesn't stop you from catching Covid or passing it on and from the reaction I've seen of people who have received their first jab it's smiles and thumbs up thinking life will be back to normal soon. Question is will it. What happens if you've had the jabs and you're let loose back into society and you give the virus to someone who hasn't had the jab, regardless of age or their circumstances for not having the jab and that person dies from you passing it on. It might be someone in your family or whatever. So how does all this work out looking into the future.
Tim.
The latest I read was "we don't know" re: the vaccine doesn't stop you from catching Covid or passing it on. The seems to be a lot of "we don't know" about the whole thing. And I don't know sweet FA either.TitanTim said:The worrying thing for me is the vaccine doesn't stop you from catching Covid or passing it on and from the reaction I've seen of people who have received their first jab it's smiles and thumbs up thinking life will be back to normal soon. Question is will it. What happens if you've had the jabs and you're let loose back into society and you give the virus to someone who hasn't had the jab, regardless of age or their circumstances for not having the jab and that person dies from you passing it on. It might be someone in your family or whatever. So how does all this work out looking into the future.
Tim.
Similar situation here. MrsG has had her first Jab, as she works in care. No idea when I will get mine. So little is going to change in this household for a good while yet.Argyll Andy said:TitanTim said:The worrying thing for me is the vaccine doesn't stop you from catching Covid or passing it on and from the reaction I've seen of people who have received their first jab it's smiles and thumbs up thinking life will be back to normal soon. Question is will it. What happens if you've had the jabs and you're let loose back into society and you give the virus to someone who hasn't had the jab, regardless of age or their circumstances for not having the jab and that person dies from you passing it on. It might be someone in your family or whatever. So how does all this work out looking into the future.
Tim.
Tim, I’ve just come off the phone to someone and he was asking about when I was getting the vaccine. I said soon but I’m really unsure what difference it’ll make. I concluded by saying by the looks of it , it’s going to make very little difference in what I can do or who I can mix with.
It’ll just hopefully give me a much better chance of survival than if I didn’t get it but I’ll still be surrounded by people who won’t get the vaccine, including my partner because they’re not in a risk category.
Using the calculator, she’s September until she’s due hers.
I have no issues with the Anti vax brigade as long as they keep their opinions to themselves and don't try to influence others. Not interested in their reasoning at all. Just give each and everyone in their turn the offer of a vaccine, if they refuse then they go to the end of the list. When everyone who wants the vaccine has had it, offer the refuseniks it again. If they still don't want it then so be it. Let them live their lives with any consequences of their decisionsexdos said:ronk said:![]()
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I think no matter what academic evidence is given for the vaccine- the anti vax brigade have made their decision and they won’t be convinced otherwise
I give up !
^^^^^^^^^^
THIS