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Well, hello there!

@fortunecookiecat

Hi!  I'm Cheyenne!  Call me Chey, Cheyenne, or Mango whatever works ^^ Nice to meet ya! Also I have THE cutest brother. ever. *~ Gemini | Hufflepuff | Gamer~* Chronic Overthinker, Otome Addict. Probably the most indecisive yet decisive person you'll ever meet.
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Responding to COVID Cult Talking Points

“All/most of the people in the hospital with COVID are unvaccinated.”

- Hospitalizations are still very low compared to what they were in spring of last year. The real question is what percent of unvaccinated people who test positive for COVID are hospitalized (notice how they don’t push those numbers)

- Hospitalizations are defined differently in different places. In some cases, “hospitalized” means “went to the hospital to receive care,” and doesn’t even necessarily mean they’re staying overnight. They may have simply been held for a little while for observation and then sent home with medication or vitamins.

- Many of the people who have been told by their doctors not to get the vaccine because of their medical history are also vulnerable to COVID because of that same medical history. That’s why it’s important for doctors and patients to get real data and factual information about available treatments and therapeutics, including medications that can be used off-label.

“Hospitals/ICUs are nearing/at/over capacity.”

- Hospitals want to be near capacity at all times. It’s how they make profit. If they are truly overwhelmed, they will cancel elective procedures. Check to see if they’re doing that before you panic.

- Hospital capacity is not just the physical space or number of physical beds. The number of “available beds” is also dependent on staff availability. Our economy is experiencing a labor shortage, there was a nursing shortage before COVID, and many hospitals have suspended or fired doctors, nurses, and other staff for refusing to get the vaccine. Less staff = fewer available beds, which is why a hospital can be mostly empty and still be “over capacity.”

“There’s no evidence that the vaccine has long-term side effects.”

- Of course there’s no evidence, because it hasn’t been “long term” yet. Impacts on cancer, fertility, and other health issues won’t be seen for years, because it takes years for those problems to develop.

- For instance, an OB/Gyn won’t even consider a patient to have fertility problems unless she’s been trying to get pregnant for over 6 months without success. Most people haven’t even been vaccinated for 6 months, much less actively trying to get pregnant and seeing an OB about it. Studies are currently being done on whether the mRNA vaccine has an impact on ovarian reserve, with data expected early next year.

“Unvaccinated people are responsible for the Delta Variant”

- We know that vaccinated people can contract, carry, and transmit COVID.

- Vaccinated people are more likely to be asymptomatic, and therefore not know they have COVID and potentially spread it without realizing.

“Getting the vaccine reduces your risk of getting COVID.”

- Vaccinated people are less likely to get tested if they don’t have symptoms, since many places that require negative tests for unvaccinated people don’t require those tests for vaccinated people. That means unvaccinated people are getting tested more often, and will be overrepresented in case data.

- The case study cited by the CDC when they changed their mask guidance had data showing that the percentage of cases in vaccinated people was proportionate to the vaccination rate of the area. That suggests that protection against infection may not be as high as people thought.

- The effectiveness data for the vaccines is the effectiveness at preventing severe illness, not preventing transmission or infection. The initial studies done before the vaccines got emergency use authorization were not designed to measure whether the vaccine prevents transmission or infection.

“This person had a severe reaction to COVID or has ‘long COVID.’”

- We definitely need more research on therapeutics and other treatments to be able to help those who had a hard time with this virus.

- Individual stories do not translate to general risk. Keep data in mind and look at severe illness/death rates for your demographic.

- I can tell you stories of people I know who have had lasting adverse reactions from the vaccine. We need good data to be able to make good decisions.

“It’s okay that we’re [locking down, mandating masks, mandating vaccines] because we [violated rights some other way in the past].”

- Doing something wrong in the past does not justify doing it again in the future.

- Just because there may have been good outcomes in the past doesn’t mean the ends justify the means.

- Rights given up usually have to be taken back. Often at great cost.

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Milk drunk

Different day, still drunk.

To-day, too drunk

I'm beginning to think he just simply doesn't have any dignity.

Drunk with family.

19 days drunk

Also drunk beans

Druuuunk. And only 20 days old. For shame.

21 days old. That's old enough to drink, right?

Success! Dunk again!

25 days old now.

31 says old, drunk on a quarter cup of formula (60mls, an entire bottle).

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alex--blue
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shymagnolia

so I got into grad school today with my shitty 2.8 gpa and the moral of the story is reblog those good luck posts for the love of god

okay so i just got my dream job??? a week after applying to it?? and now i’m thinking….maybe this is the good luck post

…..not even six hours later i got an offer of a well paying full time long-term job with free room and board in queens in nyc, allowing me independence and a way to escape an abusive situation and an unhealthy environment

likes charge reblogs cast, folks, this is the good luck post

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