Actual_Cryptid
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2021
- Messages
- 200
It seems a little strange to me that you would hear that there's been 20,000 deaths and that no medication was ever allowed on the market with even 100 deaths, but that you wouldn't try to verify that kind of claim for yourself.I’m hearing it on podcasts, YouTube videos, and some from the main stream news. As well as just word of mouth from friends. I’m not claiming I’m correct, I’m just trying to gather information from every source I can. I’m not telling people not to get vaccinated, nor am I telling people to get vaccinated. I’m trying to figure it out for myself. I’m always interested to hear where our health professionals get their information from. They are the ones we are supposed to trust. When I hear a Doctor openly say it is safe and that they try to encourage everyone they know to take it, and that Doctor has seen data to prove that, I am very interested in that source. As should everyone who is taking medications. I think the deaths associated with the vaccine might be on the actual cdc website as well.
It sounds like the podcasts and YouTube videos you're hearing the 20,000 number from are misrepresenting what VAERS data is. VAERS is a collection system that tracks any adverse health event after a vaccination. It does not state or claim any causal link between a vaccination (any vaccination, not just COVID vaccines) and the event. There are VAERS reports that report a child's self-inflicted gunshot wound or a car accident injury after vaccination, because the purpose of VAERS is that everything gets reported and the data gets analyzed after the fact. Grifters have been using VAERS to lie about vaccines for a couple decades now.
I personally find it curious that you heard about this outrageous stuff from YouTube videos and podcasts, vaccine manufacturers admitting to 20,000 deaths caused by their vaccines, and then didn't try to verify such a groundbreaking claim on your own. It's a fairly easy thing to examine I reckon, as I was able to pretty quickly figure out how you were lied to and the debunking of that lie is certainly not new.
The efforts of antivaxxers to portray COVID-19 vaccines as harmful or even deadly continue apace (VAERS edition)
With the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines continuing apace, so are the efforts of antivaxxers to portray the vaccines as dangerous. This time around, they've resurrected the old antivaccine trick of decep
sciencebasedmedicine.org
It's such an old tune that folks like Dr. Gorski have been addressing it for more than a year for the covid vaccines specifically. I remember the same song and dance from the antivax people back in the 2000s, like the article below debunking the misuse of VAERS data in 2009:
Swine Flu Vaccine Fearmongering
Fear is a curious thing. It often bears no relation to the actual risk of what we fear. When swine flu first broke out in Mexico, people were understandably afraid. Travel was restricted, schools
sciencebasedmedicine.org
Let me sidebar, the cat woke me up early this morning by dancing on my head so I'm a little cranky. I hate that YouTube, podcasts, and even moreso Facebook videos and TikTok are short-circuiting our fact-checking abilities. I was having this conversation with friends in 2014 or so, I started noticing the trend of YouTube videos that would just throw a bunch of claims out there and build a narrative, usually with quick cuts and partial quotes. It's very convincing if you're already inclined to listen, and the odds that anyone is going to pause the video, look up what was claimed and try to assess how true a particular claim is are extremely low. Guys like Paul Joseph Watson made their career off doing that, the Food Babe made a (thankfully brief) career out of it, and it's been the core function of my personal frenemy Alex Jones for his whole career. Do a 4 hour show, nobody can possibly check everything you say, especially if they're listening while they're driving (guilty!) or at work. Even a 10 minute video takes much longer to go through, I think it was back in 2015 my sister sent me a 15 minute video and it took 2 hours to run down each headline he showed briefly, read the article, research a bit deeper, and then pull together the facts to demonstrate why he was lying. Could have been longer if the presenter was a faster talker. But now you can do a 2hr podcast where it's even harder, there's no screenshots to check and you can't rewind as precisely (that 15sec skip makes it choppy). TikTok goes the opposite way, throw out a whole plate of spaghetti in 30 seconds while someone is pooping, they're not gonna spend 30 minutes checking what you said in a 30 second video. It's not a left or right issue, it's a "it's profitable for people to say outrageous things that get clicks and get shared" problem, and it drives me up a wall.
Ugh. Maybe some eggs and venison will rescue this morning from it's inauspicious start.