personally I do think people who decline it are dumb or ignorant, but I reserve the term "dumbass" for extreme cases, such as that specific tweet which was in response to the combination of medical exemption AND vocal anti-vaxer
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @cmuratori and
but this is also because the venn diagram of people who dont want the vax and the people who refused to wear a mask or thought masks were harmful is nearly a circle as well. that position does not seem to come in a vacuum on its own, based on people I know
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @cmuratori and
so if theres a mythical person who did the research and came to the conclusion that they might want to wait for more data before getting the shot, and also take all the other precautions like mask wearing and avoiding crowds while waiting, then I wouldn't call that person dumb
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @cmuratori and
but I'm pretty sure that person doesn't exist
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @sohakes and
I guarantee you that person exists - they are just very scientific people, and obviously rare, as you might expect.
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Replying to @cmuratori @sohakes and
doesn't exist *in significant enough numbers to matter
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @sohakes and
Well, I would argue the same about people who really understood the vaccine before taking it, and the possible long-term epidemiological outcomes, too :)
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Replying to @cmuratori @sohakes and
we have a very useful shortcut for that called "listen to the experts" though
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Replying to @TylerGlaiel @sohakes and
That sentiment I do object to. Saying "listen to the experts" presumes the person knows who is an expert, which is precisely the thing in question here. I point again to examples, such as "eat mostly carbohydrates" situation.
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Replying to @cmuratori @TylerGlaiel and
As a simple example, when programming, should you listen to "experts" like Uncle Bob Martin? Bjarne Stroustrup? The average CS professor at a college?
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If your answer is "yes", then I guess I understand why you think what you think about medical experts. If your answer is "no", you have some explaining to do :)
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Replying to @cmuratori @TylerGlaiel and
well the medical field actually runs experimental trials, while the programming field generally doesn't. Which isn't to say you should automatically believe either side, but that's the obvious explanation for trusting one group while distrusting another.
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Replying to @Lokathor @TylerGlaiel and
The programming field runs them literally all the time. There are mountains of benchmarks, and thousands of papers with measurements in them that are under conditions at least as controlled as any medical trial ever conducted.
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