They also inevitably turn out to be grifters, which I think is a feature of this extreme libertarian ideologue that thinks markets should determine everything including what is fraud. They’re saying they think there is nothing wrong with fraud except when it’s not profitable.
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Replying to @MarkHoofnagle @dkegel and
Certainly, there are those who see a market opportunity--a gullible audience--and cash in on it.
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Replying to @SteveTiger999 @MarkHoofnagle and
when immune from liability and you can force everybody to take your product, the opportunity is great. Are there other such gigs aside from vaccines?
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Replying to @jorient @SteveTiger999 and
Extreme right wing quack seems like an interesting gig.
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Replying to @cacoethes_carpe @jorient and
Yeah. We’re all just rolling in vaccine money.
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Replying to @MarkHoofnagle @cacoethes_carpe and
On vaccine safety: I think it is important to cite the investigations done in response to charges of vaccine-induced injury, lest people wonder if the accusations are true. Target audience is not AAPS et al but those silently following the exchange, uncertain of what is true.
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Replying to @SteveTiger999 @cacoethes_carpe and
My only disagreement is that I don’t believe in the mythical fence sitter or information deficit theories of vaccine hesitance. The problem is disinformation glut. We fight with information sure, but also mockery and attacking platforms and peddlers of disinfo.
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Replying to @MarkHoofnagle @SteveTiger999 and
I do. There are a lot of parents or there who are confused and scared about vaccines who are vaccine hesitant but not antivaccine. It's why I make a distinction between the two.
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Replying to @gorskon @MarkHoofnagle and
There is a disinfo glut; there are also parents on the fence. The way to reach the parents on the fence is not to reply to disinfo, though. That just amplifies it, I'm afraid. People prefer the scarier story. See e.g. https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/03/largest-study-ever-fake-news-mit-twitter/555104/ …
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The polite antivaxxer, though a rare beast, is worth replying to politely. Once the firmness of their position is clear, though, it's best for all concerned to move on, I think. Marie, Ken, Punter, and Rusty Mike are all examples of this in their own way.
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Polite antivaxers, more often than not, are sealioning.http://wondermark.com/1k62/
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Replying to @gorskon @MarkHoofnagle and
Yep. It didn't take long for Corazon to show her colors, and my polite, well-researched answer is probably as far as it'll go.
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That's my experience too.
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