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Conspiracy theories

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I know hundreds of people who got the vaccine, including myself and the missus, and not one of them experienced any negative side effects apart from some drowsiness on the first day. I literally know nobody who has reported adverse after-effects.

To all the anti-vax dorks that post here, if everyone does start dropping dead from the vaccine, me and my anomalous circle of immune super-people will fight tooth and nail to take the world back from the evil scientists
What you can do though, is go onto the study @dholliday referenced and say that you had life changing side effects from it completely unchecked.

You can do it more than once if you're inclined to do that.

I had no side effects apart from a sore arm during my vaccination, but according to my survey input I had life changing implications.
 
I know hundreds of people who got the vaccine, including myself and the missus, and not one of them experienced any negative side effects apart from some drowsiness on the first day. I literally know nobody who has reported adverse after-effects.

To all the anti-vax dorks that post here, if everyone does start dropping dead from the vaccine, me and my anomalous circle of immune super-people will fight tooth and nail to take the world back from the evil scientists
I've had pains in my arm for over a year where he second jab was. Its now progressed to pins and needles all day long in the last few weeks. I should probably got he doctors tbh. lol
 
Right, correct me if I'm wrong, unvaccinated mainly just hurt themselves? Everyone, vaccinated or not can still carry and spread covid?
From childrens' hospital of Philadelphia website...

Some people ask the question, “If vaccines work, why do unvaccinated people present a risk to those who have been vaccinated?” Two simple facts contribute to this answer. First: Vaccines aren’t 100 percent effective. So even some people who are vaccinated will still be at risk. Second: The greater the number of unvaccinated people in a community, the more opportunity germs have to spread. This means outbreaks are more difficult to stem and everyone is at greater risk of exposure — including vaccinated people.

This latter concept is known as community immunity, or more commonly, herd immunity. Each member of the community contributes to the collective health of the community because the way a pathogen survives is by finding new people to infect. The fewer susceptible people in a community, the less opportunity the pathogen has to spread.

Interestingly, people often do not think about the fact that there are times when every family needs the protection of their community. New babies and infants may be too young to be vaccinated, and older adults or adults being treated for illnesses may be more susceptible to infections as well.
 

What you can do though, is go onto the study @dholliday referenced and say that you had life changing side effects from it completely unchecked.

You can do it more than once if you're inclined to do that.

I had no side effects apart from a sore arm during my vaccination, but according to my survey input I had life changing implications.

Funnily enough, the reason I know a bit about the yellow card system, is I did a bit of analytical stuff on it for work last year. From memory about 40% of the reports were people reporting a sore arm. Another 30-40% were people reporting tiredness, hot / cold spells etc.

There were also some reports of really random stuff. 2 reports of illiteracy, 1 report of high income. I can’t find it now, it must have been removed, but there was also a report of homosexuality. ‘The vaccine made me gay!’

Likely people thought they were completing biographic info, but these are actually counted as adverse reactions.

It’s a very noisy dataset.

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There were also some reports of really random stuff. 2 reports of illiteracy, 1 report of high income. I can’t find it now, it must have been removed, but there was also a report of homosexuality.


You know, random bumming sessions with other men definitely increased after the vaccine, and I've actually been enjoying them a lot more than I did pre-covid
 
Funnily enough, the reason I know a bit about the yellow card system, is I did a bit of analytical stuff on it for work last year. From memory about 40% of the reports were people reporting a sore arm. Another 30-40% were people reporting tiredness, hot / cold spells etc.

There were also some reports of really random stuff. 2 reports of illiteracy, 1 report of high income. I can’t find it now, it must have been removed, but there was also a report of homosexuality. ‘The vaccine made me gay!’

Likely people thought they were completing biographic info, but these are actually counted as adverse reactions.

It’s a very noisy dataset.

View attachment 174926
As I routinely stated in the Covid-19 thread "be critical of the data" precisely for this reason.

It's an incredibly useful tool the yellow card to look at broad data sets, but as you've nicely illustrated, can be erroneous.
 

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