My assumption, of course, is that they do not, and they are equally ignorant to the people who are anti-vaccine, but I am always happy to be surprised!
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And what’s the point of the challenge?
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To see whether people who push the vaccine have taken the time to understand the consequences, or if they are actually just randomly doing so because they read something on the internet. Exactly the same as the inverse test you might do for someone pushing anti-vaccine sentiment.
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idk is this gonna be asking me to cite studies or obscure technical details that are irrelevant to whether it works or not, or just stuff that actually should be general knowledge?
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Strictly technical details, and only those that implicate our knowledge of whether or not it is safe to receive. It would include things like knowing all of the things that have and have not been tested for safety, the history of vaccine safety, the protocol design, etc.
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Replying to @cmuratori @TylerGlaiel and
Why? When virtually every (credible) medical professional around is pushing the vaccine, I think you can trust that. Are you forgetting about credibility here?
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Replying to @IFollowTechStu1 @TylerGlaiel and
My entire career is basically about repeatedly discovering that 99% of people who work in technical professions have absolutely no idea what they're talking about. So no, credibility counts for absolutely nothing. Most historical consensuses proved to be wrong or unfounded.
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Replying to @cmuratori @IFollowTechStu1 and
It is always critical to independently verify before zealously advocating, otherwise you really shouldn't be zealous.
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Replying to @cmuratori @IFollowTechStu1 and
Is the big reveal going to be your own completed homework with citations? Or are you just being a troll?
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Replying to @NickDrisc0ll @IFollowTechStu1 and
There's no big reveal, but of course I did a ton of research on this before I got vaccinated.
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(And that is one reason I'm very skeptical of people zealously pushing vaccines on-line, because having done the research, you can easily understand the perspective of somebody who wouldn't want a vaccine that's less than a few years old, etc.)
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Replying to @cmuratori @IFollowTechStu1 and
You're "skeptical of people zealously pushing vaccines on-line", but what does that even mean in this case? If you did a ton of research about the vaccine, presumably concluding that the vaccine is a good thing and getting it is a good idea, then why would you have a problem with
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