“We were involved in Mozambique spreading the AIDS virus through medical conditions... to eradicate

Black Panther

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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:
 

Blackrogue

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They say that the first documented case of AIDS was in new york with some sailors

Right after that, suddenly it hops across the ocean and its an epidemic in africa huh:rudy:



I wonder how gay men in San Francisco got in from Africans :Hatedit:
 
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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.



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.




...Because it goes without saying? :bpgucci:




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:

1. What scientific results?

Dr. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the Lancet, published a statement declaring that 50% of published peer-reviewed research is fake.

The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance, science has taken a turn towards darkness.” (source)


Drug Companies & Doctors: A Story of Corruption


Why Most Published Research Findings Are False

2. Guaranteed clean water is subjected especially since its cheapier to make water reserviors than vaccines. Also it's being lazy especially since without water there is no food, hygenie, health.


It makes the excuse worse after...'Huge' water resource in Africa

Flint is an example of elites trying to get over on the people by not cleaning up their mess.
 

Black Panther

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1. What scientific results?


Myth #5: Better hygiene and sanitation are actually responsible for decreased infections, not vaccines.

Vaccines don't deserve all the credit for reducing or eliminating rates of infectious disease. Better sanitation, nutrition, and the development of antibiotics helped a lot too. But when these factors are isolated and rates of infectious disease are scrutinized, the role of vaccines cannot be denied.

One example is measles in the United States. When the first measles vaccine was introduced in 1963, rates of infection had been holding steady at around 400,000 cases a year. And while hygienic habits and sanitation didn't change much over the following decade, the rate of measles infections dropped precipitously following the introduction of the vaccine, with only around 25,000 cases by 1970. Another example is Hib disease. According to CDC data, the incidence rate for this malady plummeted from 20,000 in 1990 to around 1,500 in 1993, following the introduction of the vaccine.

Myth #6: Vaccines aren't worth the risk.

Despite parent concerns, children have been successfully vaccinated for decades. In fact, there has never been a single credible study linking vaccines to long term health conditions.


As for immediate danger from vaccines, in the form of allergic reactions or severe side effects, the incidence of death are so rare they can't even truly be calculated. For example, only one death was reported to the CDC between 1990 and 1992 that was attributable to a vaccine. The overall incidence rate of severe allergic reaction to vaccines is usually placed around one case for every one or two million injections.

Vaccine Myths Debunked | PublicHealth.org
 

MischievousMonkey

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Black or white?
Or it doesn't matter?


:lupe:



Just did the moonwalk on a Michael Jackson quote
:mj:
Y8WNZ99.jpg

NXJkFYT.jpg

HfSL5tm.jpg

How often do you detangle it? In the morning or before going to bed?

What's your method?

My fro is growing and growing but I'm not sure I'm doing this correctly


I'm in the club now :blessed:

I'm either black or someone with a lot of time to lose :manny:
 
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EndDomination

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The Tuskegee experiment occurred on US soil simpleton
You know they didn't give them syphilis, they just didn't treat the numerous men who had it when they had the cure on-hand, right? :dwillhuh:
Like 10% of the US adult population had syphilis in the 1930s.
 

EndDomination

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The same as Iraq and every other place cacs including the US are messing with.

Mozambique and Angola produce gas and oil. According to Google Mozambique produced 200 billion cubic feet of natural gas in 2016 alone.

If the states spread Agent Zero in vietnam and that caused gross deformities two generations down. Why wouldn't they spread some disease that ravishes a country. I for one find it weird that this disease appeared out of nowhere for the first time in known history.
This is a bit of a misrepresentation.
Who knows how many traditional medicine people throughout Congo and the like had an understanding of HIV as a disease. It appeared throughout small communities, but without urbanization, spread was immensely difficult.
If the Whites had bothered to keep up records from the people of each village, there's a solid chance an immense amount about HIV and SIV may have been known.

Ebola was rocking in the 70s, but White people didn't care.
They say that the first documented case of AIDS was in new york with some sailors

Right after that, suddenly it hops across the ocean and its an epidemic in africa huh:rudy:
Actually, the first case that shares the symptoms associated w/ HIV/AIDS infection was with a young Black boy who may have been sex trafficked.

There was also a Japanese airline stewardess several decades before who seems to also have remnants of the disease, 1930s-40s.
 

xCivicx

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You know they didn't give them syphilis, they just didn't treat the numerous men who had it when they had the cure on-hand, right? :dwillhuh:
Like 10% of the US adult population had syphilis in the 1930s.
"It wasn't biological assault, it was just pre-planned medical malpractice"

Oh I guess that's better:unimpressed:

Do you have syphilis?
 
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