IliveForJuve

Burn this club
Jan 17, 2011
18,923
Not really. And plenty of vaccines are already mandatory as it is. Mandatory vaccines without proper democratic control, that is the ultimate violation.

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Yeah, I agree. I was just trying to keep @lgorTudor from attacking me :grin:

This would've been true within the first 6 months of the vaccine(s) being out but now it's safe to say there are no long term consequences. The ones not taking it are making a political statement or being simple retards.

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This aint march 2020, we are not about every life is sacred bullshit, the success of the differring opinion or any opinion is in coming up with the best way to mitigate this. This is not going away, we are not going to erradicate it, it will kill many more, so let's stop with the silly what about the grandmas.

The bad social problem is people still defending this so called consensus, after they have been wrong about almost everything so far, science is evidence based not consensus based, this is not pychoLOLgy.
Can't wait until Biden/your state makes the vaccines mandatory and the government chases you in one of those animal control trucks and vaccinates you against your will in a dog pound.
 
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Post Ironic

Senior Member
Feb 9, 2013
42,253
Oh yeah, can't go wrong there. Never happened :shifty:
So because majorities have been wrong on occasion we should just listen to the loudmouth minority instead? :lol:

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This aint march 2020, we are not about every life is sacred bullshit, the success of the differring opinion or any opinion is in coming up with the best way to mitigate this. This is not going away, we are not going to erradicate it, it will kill many more, so let's stop with the silly what about the grandmas.

The bad social problem is people still defending this so called consensus, after they have been wrong about almost everything so far, science is evidence based not consensus based, this is not pychoLOLgy.
Says the guy who jumped on the hydroxychloroquine bandwagon when there was zero evidence it worked and is now posting Del Bigtree propaganda videos as evidence the vaccines are dangerous :lol:
 

GordoDeCentral

Diez
Moderator
Apr 14, 2005
70,781
So because majorities have been wrong on occasion we should just listen to the loudmouth minority instead? :lol:

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Says the guy who jumped on the hydroxychloroquine bandwagon when there was zero evidence it worked and is now posting Del Bigtree propaganda videos as evidence the vaccines are dangerous :lol:
Right? And even with that and no phd still a better batting average than your gods.
 

Quetzalcoatl

It ain't hard to tell
Aug 22, 2007
66,753
What is your alternative then?
For what, making sense of things? Certainly not to assume that the overwhelming consensus is the truth and remain open minded and skeptical.

So because majorities have been wrong on occasion we should just listen to the loudmouth minority instead? :lol:
Yeah, that's what I said :andyandbarcelona:
 

lgorTudor

Senior Member
Jan 15, 2015
32,951
Is it usually so early?
Yea, it's 'fake christmas' where you're forced to come to some cringe work party before everybody fucks off into winter vacation. Hard mode: They're doing Secret Santa and you have to buy some random faggot a 10€ powerbank in a walmart on your way to the party because you couldn't be assed to make an effort. Spooky event through and through
 

Enron

Tickle Me
Moderator
Oct 11, 2005
75,659
Yea, it's 'fake christmas' where you're forced to come to some cringe work party before everybody fucks off into winter vacation. Hard mode: They're doing Secret Santa and you have to buy some random faggot a 10€ powerbank in a walmart on your way to the party because you couldn't be assed to make an effort. Spooky event through and through
No secret Santa, just a bunch of lineman and electricians tearing up a fancy driving range and trying to make it the 4th place we’ve been kicked out of in 5 years.
 

lgorTudor

Senior Member
Jan 15, 2015
32,951
it’s usually a couple weeks later but our CEO is coming from Toronto and we’re the first stop on his holiday party tour.
haha, our CEO literally had us fly into HQ city one year and 'invited' us into his 'amazing new house' for dinner and on the next day we had to go to the christmas market together. And then there was a fuckin 35€ budget for like 7 people

I want out of the hamster wheel

No secret Santa, just a bunch of lineman and electricians tearing up a fancy driving range and trying to make it the 4th place we’ve been kicked out of in 5 years.
doesn't sound too bad
 

Enron

Tickle Me
Moderator
Oct 11, 2005
75,659
haha, our CEO literally had us fly into HQ city one year and 'invited' us into his 'amazing new house' for dinner and on the next day we had to go to the christmas market together

I want out of the hamster wheel

doesn't sound too bad
Not bad at all. It tends to get pretty wild, last year a husband and wife got into a fist fight during the speeches. It was great.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
84,750
This aint march 2020, we are not about every life is sacred bullshit, the success of the differring opinion or any opinion is in coming up with the best way to mitigate this. This is not going away, we are not going to erradicate it, it will kill many more, so let's stop with the silly what about the grandmas.

The bad social problem is people still defending this so called consensus, after they have been wrong about almost everything so far, science is evidence based not consensus based, this is not pychoLOLgy.
Different opinions can come from different contexts. We were talking about doctors and scientists, which are only a couple of perspectives ... valid as they are. But in a world dominated by specialists, there's nothing about that validity that suggests it must somehow carry over into politics, economics, etc. Let alone some virologist's opinion about public health and lockdowns, let alone mental health.

But I'm not sure where you're coming with some tyranny of consensus bubble. Scientists telling you to eat expensive magic dirt are as much a distraction today as they were in March 2020. That hasn't changed.

If you're going to rail on the complexities of weaving in the concerns beyond scientists and doctors, that's an entirely different convo.

it’s usually a couple weeks later but our CEO is coming from Toronto and we’re the first stop on his holiday party tour.
Companies on the verge of collapse usually celebrate Xmas parties in January, so good on you for that.
 

GordoDeCentral

Diez
Moderator
Apr 14, 2005
70,781
Different opinions can come from different contexts. We were talking about doctors and scientists, which are only a couple of perspectives ... valid as they are. But in a world dominated by specialists, there's nothing about that validity that suggests it must somehow carry over into politics, economics, etc. Let alone some virologist's opinion about public health and lockdowns, let alone mental health.

But I'm not sure where you're coming with some tyranny of consensus bubble. Scientists telling you to eat expensive magic dirt are as much a distraction today as they were in March 2020. That hasn't changed.

If you're going to rail on the complexities of weaving in the concerns beyond scientists and doctors, that's an entirely different convo.



Companies on the verge of collapse usually celebrate Xmas parties in January, so good on you for that.
The holistic approach is the only appropriate one. As for the tyranny, there's no denying the concerted effort by major players to drive one narrative at the expense of other explanations.
 

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