Italy over 50s 10:02 - Jan 6 with 8943 views | builthjack | It's going to be mandatory for all over 50s to be jabbed. Some countries don't mess about. | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 with 1011 views | 73__73 |
Italy over 50s on 11:33 - Jan 6 by A_Fans_Dad | One of the most anti science, anti knowledge posts on here. Hospitals are jam packed with Non-Covid patients, but still have less patients than last year and 2017 when we had a major Flu outbreak. Why don't you look at some actual numbers instead of repeating outdated propaganda sound bites? Exactly the sort of post I would expect from someone completely brainwashed. Take a look at the https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10373181/Tory-anger-BBC-bias-state-NHS. charts of comparions to the past. |
The likes of Builth and ohl are suffering from Mass formation psychosis. It’s what happened to a large percentage of the population of Germany under Hitler. | |
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Italy over 50s on 20:11 - Jan 6 with 1011 views | 73__73 |
Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 by Professor | Freedom is rather pointless if you are dead. What a vile post. |
So you obviously disagree with fighting ww2 then | |
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Italy over 50s on 20:31 - Jan 6 with 977 views | A_Fans_Dad |
Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 by 73__73 | The likes of Builth and ohl are suffering from Mass formation psychosis. It’s what happened to a large percentage of the population of Germany under Hitler. |
It certainly looks like it and they are not the only ones. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 20:32]
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Italy over 50s on 22:10 - Jan 6 with 924 views | Glossolalia |
Italy over 50s on 10:07 - Jan 6 by builthjack | If everyone was jabbed the hospitals wouldn't be jam packed. Nurses in my area are helping out in the bigger hospitals and working 60 hours a week and travelling 3 hours a day. That's not right. |
7% of people in hospitals currently have COVID. A third of those 7% have COVID incidentally, and so are hospitalised for other reasons. Chronic under-funding, a bloated management structure and the poor health of the average UK citizen are the underlying, ever-present issues that will long outstay COVID. Stop pretending that a small percentage of people not having the jab is the sole, or even a major problem to our NHS being 'jam packed'. Jabbed or otherwise, respect that for some people, the jab makes no personal sense. | | | |
Italy over 50s on 22:16 - Jan 6 with 905 views | builthjack |
Italy over 50s on 22:10 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | 7% of people in hospitals currently have COVID. A third of those 7% have COVID incidentally, and so are hospitalised for other reasons. Chronic under-funding, a bloated management structure and the poor health of the average UK citizen are the underlying, ever-present issues that will long outstay COVID. Stop pretending that a small percentage of people not having the jab is the sole, or even a major problem to our NHS being 'jam packed'. Jabbed or otherwise, respect that for some people, the jab makes no personal sense. |
Why? | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 22:22 - Jan 6 with 897 views | Glossolalia |
You're gonna need to type more mate. Why to what? | | | |
Italy over 50s on 22:23 - Jan 6 with 894 views | majorraglan |
Italy over 50s on 22:10 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | 7% of people in hospitals currently have COVID. A third of those 7% have COVID incidentally, and so are hospitalised for other reasons. Chronic under-funding, a bloated management structure and the poor health of the average UK citizen are the underlying, ever-present issues that will long outstay COVID. Stop pretending that a small percentage of people not having the jab is the sole, or even a major problem to our NHS being 'jam packed'. Jabbed or otherwise, respect that for some people, the jab makes no personal sense. |
A lot of the ones who are in the hospitals are in the ITU’s and other specialist wards where they're being ventilated or provided with oxygen, it’s resource intensive and severely limits the scope to undertake business as usual work. The points made re underfunding, bloated management and poor health in the UK are very pertinent. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 23:33]
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Italy over 50s on 22:24 - Jan 6 with 893 views | builthjack |
Italy over 50s on 22:22 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | You're gonna need to type more mate. Why to what? |
Why does the jab make no personal sense? | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 22:37 - Jan 6 with 881 views | Glossolalia |
Italy over 50s on 22:24 - Jan 6 by builthjack | Why does the jab make no personal sense? |
Do you really need to ask that question? We now have a highly-contagious, weakened strain of COVID. This is a good eventuality. We also have boosters and anti-viral tablets to take if you're vulnerable. Given that a jabbed person can carry and spread COVID, and is less likely to test before they visit people, the argument that the unjabbed are somehow dangerous or selfish in this regard is nonsense. Just to preempt you in case you were to take that route. At this point, what compelling argument for the jab can you give to a young, fit and healthy individual with a good diet and lifestyle? An individual who has seen the negative effects of the jab on his close family? (chronic fatigue, numb limbs, nausea) An individual who has, and should have, confidence in his immune system to deal with this mild strain should he catch it? There is no compelling case for it, and something tells me you won't manage to change my mind. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:37]
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Italy over 50s on 22:43 - Jan 6 with 869 views | Glossolalia |
Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 by Professor | Freedom is rather pointless if you are dead. What a vile post. |
If that's some attempt at a profound proverb, try harder 'Professor'. Overly dramatic scaremongering with just the faintest veneer of actual meaning, from the type people who think their everyone's personal GP. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:55]
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Italy over 50s on 23:11 - Jan 6 with 843 views | ExiledJack | Hearing that Omicron likely mutated in mice and then crossed back to humans. The best laid schemes o’ mousedates an’ mandates. | | | |
Italy over 50s on 23:11 - Jan 6 with 842 views | builthjack |
Italy over 50s on 22:37 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | Do you really need to ask that question? We now have a highly-contagious, weakened strain of COVID. This is a good eventuality. We also have boosters and anti-viral tablets to take if you're vulnerable. Given that a jabbed person can carry and spread COVID, and is less likely to test before they visit people, the argument that the unjabbed are somehow dangerous or selfish in this regard is nonsense. Just to preempt you in case you were to take that route. At this point, what compelling argument for the jab can you give to a young, fit and healthy individual with a good diet and lifestyle? An individual who has seen the negative effects of the jab on his close family? (chronic fatigue, numb limbs, nausea) An individual who has, and should have, confidence in his immune system to deal with this mild strain should he catch it? There is no compelling case for it, and something tells me you won't manage to change my mind. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:37]
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Being jabbed has saved shed loads of lives. You should know that. | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 23:18 - Jan 6 with 837 views | Glossolalia | At what point in that post, or any post I've made on COVID, have I denied that lives have been saved? How is that the only response to what I've written, or a cogent response of any kind to what I've written? I've given you gold and all I get back are questions asked months ago to people who aren't me. I applaud the scientists behind the vaccines. I abhor, however, the way they have been proclaimed as the life-saver for all. They are not. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 23:20]
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Italy over 50s on 23:24 - Jan 6 with 827 views | builthjack |
Italy over 50s on 23:18 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | At what point in that post, or any post I've made on COVID, have I denied that lives have been saved? How is that the only response to what I've written, or a cogent response of any kind to what I've written? I've given you gold and all I get back are questions asked months ago to people who aren't me. I applaud the scientists behind the vaccines. I abhor, however, the way they have been proclaimed as the life-saver for all. They are not. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 23:20]
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Youngsters died too. I bet their loved ones wished that they had been jabbed. | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 23:29 - Jan 6 with 823 views | Glossolalia |
Italy over 50s on 23:24 - Jan 6 by builthjack | Youngsters died too. I bet their loved ones wished that they had been jabbed. |
Youngsters die of everything. It's a part of life, in all its inherent danger. COVID is not special in this regard. Parents whose kids have died of cancer, malaria, pneumonia, diarrhea, anything, would have wished for a cure. I'm done pal, you're giving me nothing to work with, honestly. | | | |
Italy over 50s on 05:53 - Jan 7 with 780 views | builthjack |
Italy over 50s on 23:29 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | Youngsters die of everything. It's a part of life, in all its inherent danger. COVID is not special in this regard. Parents whose kids have died of cancer, malaria, pneumonia, diarrhea, anything, would have wished for a cure. I'm done pal, you're giving me nothing to work with, honestly. |
Same here. You just don't understand. | |
| Swansea Indepenent Poster Of The Year 2021. Dr P / Mart66 / Roathie / Parlay / E20/ Duffle was 2nd, but he is deluded and thinks in his little twisted brain that he won. Poor sod. We let him win this year, as he has cried for a whole year. His 14 usernames, bless his cotton socks.
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Italy over 50s on 06:26 - Jan 7 with 775 views | Professor |
Italy over 50s on 22:37 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | Do you really need to ask that question? We now have a highly-contagious, weakened strain of COVID. This is a good eventuality. We also have boosters and anti-viral tablets to take if you're vulnerable. Given that a jabbed person can carry and spread COVID, and is less likely to test before they visit people, the argument that the unjabbed are somehow dangerous or selfish in this regard is nonsense. Just to preempt you in case you were to take that route. At this point, what compelling argument for the jab can you give to a young, fit and healthy individual with a good diet and lifestyle? An individual who has seen the negative effects of the jab on his close family? (chronic fatigue, numb limbs, nausea) An individual who has, and should have, confidence in his immune system to deal with this mild strain should he catch it? There is no compelling case for it, and something tells me you won't manage to change my mind. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:37]
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At least be correct. Milder than Delta, yes. Mild in most thanks to vaccination (not natural) elicited immunity. Still capable of high levels of hospitalisation and even death. It’s not unlike the original Wuhan strain in terms of virulence. It’s the population not the pathogen where there is change. Unfortunately the ‘libertarian’ headlines are far from correct | | | |
Italy over 50s on 06:28 - Jan 7 with 774 views | Professor |
Italy over 50s on 22:43 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | If that's some attempt at a profound proverb, try harder 'Professor'. Overly dramatic scaremongering with just the faintest veneer of actual meaning, from the type people who think their everyone's personal GP. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:55]
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Can you not see the selfishness. If not you are just a more intelligent version of that. | | | |
Italy over 50s on 07:39 - Jan 7 with 742 views | Brynmill_Jack |
Italy over 50s on 22:37 - Jan 6 by Glossolalia | Do you really need to ask that question? We now have a highly-contagious, weakened strain of COVID. This is a good eventuality. We also have boosters and anti-viral tablets to take if you're vulnerable. Given that a jabbed person can carry and spread COVID, and is less likely to test before they visit people, the argument that the unjabbed are somehow dangerous or selfish in this regard is nonsense. Just to preempt you in case you were to take that route. At this point, what compelling argument for the jab can you give to a young, fit and healthy individual with a good diet and lifestyle? An individual who has seen the negative effects of the jab on his close family? (chronic fatigue, numb limbs, nausea) An individual who has, and should have, confidence in his immune system to deal with this mild strain should he catch it? There is no compelling case for it, and something tells me you won't manage to change my mind. [Post edited 6 Jan 2022 22:37]
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Couldn’t agree more , the second paragraph should really switch a light bulb on in these peoples thick heads. I’m beginning to think that a lot on here have probably had their electric cut off though sadly. It’s hilarious how these exact same people witter on about virtue signalling - and yet here they are practically falling over each other (some foaming at the mouth) to vilify a group of people who in a lot of cases will have already had Covid refusing to take the vaccine. “I did my bit for my country” - it’s as if morons have been in the trenches in the Somme or fought in the Battle of Britain. Those people never virtue signalled though unlike our band of punctured warriors littering these threads. I noted your comment to Prof further down - it seems there’s a lot of scientists and GPs on here willing to pontificate on a subject they know jack sh*t about and try to belittle and bully others. I’ve been saying for a while now the proof of the effects on immunisation are coming to light - namely there is no immunisation from Covid. Even going on the premise that the vaccines (you know the ones that if they do injure you you can’t sue anyone over) are 100% safe the mass inoculation programme has been a categorical error. Dr Geert Vanden Bossche (a qualified virologist not a vet) for one warned against it regarding the long term effects on the populations immune systems. By all means vaccinate vulnerable people with co morbidities and the sick and very elderly but large scale mass vaccination can do a lot more harm than good to people who don’t really need it (under 50’s and especially children). The evidence has shown Covid transmission is now far more virulent than at any time since the start of the pandemic. That’s with the vast majority of the population vaccinated. “But still it’s the unvaccinated people who are causing the problem”. What a sickening and utter lie that’s showed up to be but some still persist in peddling it (in the case of Felix and OHL’s case out of terror they might be wrong but too late to turn back now). The argument then comes that “you’ve only had the first two jabs, you’re not fully vaccinated “. Well it was only supposed to be one! Now it’s three and guaranteed there will be a forth , a fifth, a sixth. I hope at least some people are beginning to at least question these broken promises . Unlike the way they will not think critically over the origin of where the damn thing came from in the first place. | |
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Italy over 50s on 07:56 - Jan 7 with 728 views | 73__73 |
Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 by Professor | Freedom is rather pointless if you are dead. What a vile post. |
Benjamin Franklin was correct when he said “ Those who give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety. | |
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Italy over 50s on 08:10 - Jan 7 with 723 views | Brynmill_Jack |
Italy over 50s on 20:09 - Jan 6 by Professor | Freedom is rather pointless if you are dead. What a vile post. |
Unfortunately none of us here are immortal. We all die. Rather be dead and free than alive and enslaved. And not even your good self can see into the future - what the long term effects the vaccines will have on our immune systems with regard to other diseases and infections. Or whether they are 100% safe in themselves. | |
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Italy over 50s on 08:35 - Jan 7 with 707 views | felixstowe_jack |
Italy over 50s on 08:10 - Jan 7 by Brynmill_Jack | Unfortunately none of us here are immortal. We all die. Rather be dead and free than alive and enslaved. And not even your good self can see into the future - what the long term effects the vaccines will have on our immune systems with regard to other diseases and infections. Or whether they are 100% safe in themselves. |
Vacinations save lives. Polio deaths no more Smallpox deaths no more | |
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Italy over 50s on 09:11 - Jan 7 with 688 views | Brynmill_Jack |
Italy over 50s on 08:35 - Jan 7 by felixstowe_jack | Vacinations save lives. Polio deaths no more Smallpox deaths no more |
Polio vaccines and smallpox vaccines prevent contraction and therefore transmission of either disease. A proven medical success. The Covid vaccines don’t as the infection rate passed 200,000 a day for the first time this week. Moron. | |
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Italy over 50s on 09:12 - Jan 7 with 688 views | 73__73 |
Italy over 50s on 08:35 - Jan 7 by felixstowe_jack | Vacinations save lives. Polio deaths no more Smallpox deaths no more |
What a ridiculous comparison | |
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Italy over 50s on 09:13 - Jan 7 with 684 views | Brynmill_Jack |
Italy over 50s on 09:12 - Jan 7 by 73__73 | What a ridiculous comparison |
I’m surprised people like him are able to switch on a light let alone post on the internet. | |
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