So you admit scientific studies have little to do with vaccines.
No, that's a strawman.
You're free to believe whatever the hell you want. :kanyebp: I believe that there's plenty of scientific evidence that proves that vaccines work (how many people have you seen with polio, smallpox, yellow fever, or tuberculosis that received the appropriate vaccines?)
The problem is that people deny scientific results by alleging conspiracies. In the OP a guy admitted to helping to spread AIDS via vaccines. That doesn't mean that all vaccines are bad.
Clean water and education on hygenie is the only solutions to water born diseases.
Vaccinations can help those who don't have guaranteed access to clean water 100% of the time. It would be great if we could guarantee that people in these areas in Africa had clean water all the time, but we can't even guarantee clean water in certain areas in this country (Flint). So yeah, people who have a greater risk of contracting a water-borne illness should be vaccinated, AND we should make efforts to give them clean water. It's not either/or. It's both.
Why are you quick to jump to protect vaccines if clean water was on your list .
...Because it goes without saying? :bpgucci:
It should have been first but it's too easy to see how you work.
I still haven't prioritized vaccines over clean water, which, again, is a basic f*cking human need. :bpgucci:
They can't both be important? :bppatrice:





