[–] XSS1337 1 point 0 points 1 point (+1|-1) ago (edited ago)
"Fuck you kike. You die first " - https://voat.co/user/RedditisPropaganda31
Response: " HAHAHAHAHAHA Unless you got vaccinated , it wont be me dying JEW "
[–] RedditisPropaganda31 [S] 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
You fucking kike projecting your kikeness on me.
The Herd aspect protects those who cannot receive the vaccine, but when everyone refuses to vaccinate then the disease infects and potentially mutates into something much much much worse.
Kill yourself.... because when your kid kills an entire classroom , those parents are going to end your entire blood line.... A true holocaust..... with scalps for the accountants
[–] phw 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I think the idea is that vaccines aren't 100% effective. Say you have a measles vaccine that's theoretically 98% effective (number pulled from my ass, replace with the real one if you care enough to look it up). But even for the unlucky 2% of vaccinated people, they can still only catch measles from someone who has it, meaning they're 50 times more likely to catch it from an unvaccinated person than a vaccinated one.
[–] puggy 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
Please read up on herd immunity. Unvaccinated kids are a problem to infants and kids who cannot be vaccinated because they are immune compromised due to cancer or some other condition. The fewer vaccinated kids there are in the community, the more likely a newborn or compromised kid will get sick and possibly die. The more vaccinated kids there are, the less likely that kid will get sick. People forget that common disease such as chicken pox used to kill thousands of infants per year.
The chicken pox vaccine offers an example of the effectiveness of disease-resistant links. After the chicken pox vaccine debuted in the United States in 1995, deaths rates from chicken pox dropped by as much as 97%. Significantly, even though the vaccine is not administered to infants, no infants died from chicken pox in the United States between 2004 and 2007. These tiniest, most vulnerable links in the chain of human connections avoided exposure thanks to herd immunity.
[–] DeliciousOnions 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago (edited ago)
It's the idea of a 'tipping point' for an epidemic.
Let's say that 99% of people all get vaccinated. That 1% remaining is very unlikely to get sick, because the disease isn't able to survive in 99% of its hosts. So nobody gets sick.
Now let's say that 50% of people are vaccinated. Now the disease can spread, because enough of the people exposed are also unvaccinated that there's a chance of it continuing on.
This is also why they talk about vaccine immunity - if a disease can't spread, it can't evolve nearly as fast.
Edit - think of it in terms of a zombie outbreak. If nobody is vaccinated, zombie outbreaks are common. If half the population is vaccinated, zombie outbreaks are still common. But if 99% of the population is vaccinated, zombie outbreaks simply don't happen because they can't bite an unvaccinated host in time.
This isn't an argument to blindly let the state inject your children with mystery syringes, but it's an argument you'll hear.
[–] RedditisPropaganda31 [S] 1 point -1 points 0 points (+0|-1) ago
So people who are not vaccinated by choice .... They are simply expressing free will in their actions ... and can not harm vaccinated people since vaccines work, right?
[–] DeliciousOnions 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I'm already at the edges of my knowledge on this issue but I tend to agree with you, that unless we start to see diseases evolving from their spread among the unvaccinated there's really no danger.
[–] sheepsexplode 2 points 3 points 5 points (+5|-2) ago
Often, vaccine advocates who focus on families who have suffered from vaccine preventable diseases are accused of fear mongering. Strangely enough, fear is often what motivates people to refuse vaccines. Fear of what most parents just don’t understand; the ingredients and the side-effects.
Don’t let this be you!
Shannon Peterson, whose unvaccinated daughter died in 2001 from a vaccine-preventable disease, just shy of her sixth birthday, explained that “A life-changing event — one involving your children — will make any parent regret what they could’ve done.”
[–] RedditisPropaganda31 [S] 3 points -1 points 2 points (+2|-3) ago
I can link THOUSANDS of cases of parents regretting vaccines because AUTISM.
Shill much?
[–] sheepsexplode 2 points 1 point 3 points (+3|-2) ago (edited ago)
Go ahead link away.
Won’t change how you’d feel losing your kid to something preventable.
Calling me a name only indicates your level of intellect.
You are to stupid to know your stupid.
[–] Orangishlemon 6 points -1 points 5 points (+5|-6) ago
Because babies can’t be vaccinated you retard.
Herd immunity only works if the herd is immunized.
[–] RedditisPropaganda31 [S] 5 points 0 points 5 points (+5|-5) ago
Babies are vaccinated at 1-2 months, retard
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/parents/downloads/parent-ver-sch-0-6yrs.pdf
The CDC recommends HUNDREDS of vaccines for infants and toddlers. This number keeps growing.
[–] XSS1337 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago (edited ago)
and babies are protected by the mothers immune system upto 6 months .... then they develop their own defenses.
You cannot give a potent vaccine (mumps) to a baby because it could mutate their defenses and kill the kid....
Time to rope the non vaccinated (exception for allergic reactions of course)
[–] sakuramboo 2 points 3 points 5 points (+5|-2) ago (edited ago)
But, newborns/babies do get vaccinated.
https://www.healthline.com/health/vaccinations/infant-immunization-schedule#schedule-chart2
[–] Orangishlemon 5 points -2 points 3 points (+3|-5) ago
Read your own link. Are you dumber than a nigger?