I'm sure most if not all of you are anti vax but I was curious to hear your opinions on this. What is the possibility it could cause autism and other debilitating side effects ?
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Kopkot on scored.co
1 year ago2 points(+0/-0/+2Score on mirror)1 child
Our son is unvax and hes healthier than all the vaxxed kids. We let him basically play with anyone (not honeless weirdos, ghetto brats) so i dont think you need to shelter kids until they are actually sick and they can recover at home past a fever etc.
In your post, imo, You are right until you mentioned MMR and dtap as dangerous. If you go to even wikipedia read about how rare severe illness is for these diseases. Measles is not dangerous. Mumps isn't either. And rubella is only dangerous for some pregnant women who contract it and can hurt the baby in utero.
Chicken pox is not dangerous to children and the vaccine has shown correlation with shingles reoutbreak in old people which is much more dangerous.
Dtp is a mixed bag and Im not sure off the top of my head except that diphtheria is rare and most cases are asymptomatic, pertussis is fatal in less than a percent of children that contract it under a year old, tetanus is quite sketchy however and would consider the vaccine for this above the others.
The question to really ask though, is do these vaccines even work? And for how long? They say you are supposed to get boosters for instance, for tetanus every 10 years. And I have not. Yet I haven't gotten tetanus.
Thanks for the response, I must admit my knowledge is VERY limited and flawed. Tetanus though I do agree in that matter, it's no joke and probably one of the scariest diseases out there. I'm wary about vaccines like many, but if I touch a rusty nail I'm hauling ass to a clinic.
Tetanus seems to exist in soil everywhere so we probably just develop immunity at some point. Idk much either tbh. But my logic is: if you are arguing for an intervention, you must make the case to do it. We are living with the reverse where the intervention (vaccinating) is the standard and we must make the case not to do it. Its an inversion of the scientific principles of proving assertions.
In your post, imo, You are right until you mentioned MMR and dtap as dangerous. If you go to even wikipedia read about how rare severe illness is for these diseases. Measles is not dangerous. Mumps isn't either. And rubella is only dangerous for some pregnant women who contract it and can hurt the baby in utero.
Chicken pox is not dangerous to children and the vaccine has shown correlation with shingles reoutbreak in old people which is much more dangerous.
Dtp is a mixed bag and Im not sure off the top of my head except that diphtheria is rare and most cases are asymptomatic, pertussis is fatal in less than a percent of children that contract it under a year old, tetanus is quite sketchy however and would consider the vaccine for this above the others.
The question to really ask though, is do these vaccines even work? And for how long? They say you are supposed to get boosters for instance, for tetanus every 10 years. And I have not. Yet I haven't gotten tetanus.