W
whit3rd
Guest
On Tuesday, April 5, 2022 at 12:00:01 AM UTC-7, Commander Kinsey wrote:
The word \'probably\' does not square with the suggestion of \'everyone\'. My friends and neighbors DO
see a lot of the same things I do, which means we share a lot of the same views... in the landscape-scenery
sense and many others. It\'d be a surprise if that were not the case.
A hypothetical scenario is not \'fact\', but fiction. And, that scenario does not indicate causality as
suggested. It doesn\'t draw ANY pictures, silly or not.
On Tue, 05 Apr 2022 07:56:20 +0100, whit3rd <whi...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Monday, April 4, 2022 at 9:16:30 PM UTC-7, Commander Kinsey wrote:
Mr Jones is vaccinated, he gets covid, he feels a little off, so meets more people before deciding to isolate.
... and since he is representative of his local population., those people are probably vaccinated.
Why would everyone in a local population have the same views?
The word \'probably\' does not square with the suggestion of \'everyone\'. My friends and neighbors DO
see a lot of the same things I do, which means we share a lot of the same views... in the landscape-scenery
sense and many others. It\'d be a surprise if that were not the case.
Mr Foster is vaccinated and gets no symptoms, and meets hundred of people. He kills a shitload of them. The vaccine caused these deaths.
Vaccination that causes \'no symptoms\' also presumablly lessens the infectious period. So, vaccinated or not,
that can happen, and \'He kills\' is wrong because only a few will get the disease, most are (like Mr. Foster) vaccinated.
Vaccination in Foster implies probable vaccination of his cohort of neighbors.
There\'s a branching tree, with vaccination near the trunk, but that doesn\'t make it the cause of all the elements
on its fork.
Drawing silly tree pictures doesn\'t negate simple facts.
A hypothetical scenario is not \'fact\', but fiction. And, that scenario does not indicate causality as
suggested. It doesn\'t draw ANY pictures, silly or not.