- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: Never ever forget about what they did to our country
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:59 am to Hognutz
Posted on 8/12/25 at 10:59 am to Hognutz
quote:
So you have less excuse to not see through the pseudoscience of virology.
Probably so.
However, I was taught very little about viruses, just the structure and function of a few common viruses, and that was 30 years ago, so the tech to study them was substantially less than it is today.
But I do suspect there are still large holes in the science that are filled by theory.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:02 am to NIH
quote:
it only seriously affected fats and olds
Kind of odd to refer to over half the population as "only".
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:11 am to LSUbest
That's pretty much what the "crazies" I follow say as well. I just find it fascinating when medically trained professionals go down the rabbit holes and and come out with different perspectives on things that "everybody knows is true" and immediately are labeled and dismissed by colleagues who haven't bothered. There's much to risk for them, too much.
This quote always comes to mind.
“It's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on not understanding it."
-Upton Sinclair
This quote always comes to mind.
“It's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on not understanding it."
-Upton Sinclair
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:17 am to Hognutz
quote:
“It's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on not understanding it."
So very true.
I left the field because I was defunded.
I did not find what the Department of the Interior wanted.
No Ragerts!
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:19 am to LSUbest
Good job. Otherwise
I'm sure.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:23 am to FLTech
I will never forget and never forgive
Posted on 8/12/25 at 11:26 am to OccamsStubble
quote:these were the kids who missed proms and some of the best years of their lives in high school. Now they’re pissed and going to TPUSA events on college campuses. The tide has changed with young people as evidenced by the last election.
Nah. The biggest victims are kids who missed three years of traditional school and were injected with something that they did not need.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:09 pm to Hognutz
Damn that statement is retarded.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:19 pm to crazy4lsu
Amazing how many contrarian Galileos there are.
This post was edited on 8/12/25 at 12:21 pm
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:23 pm to Hognutz
quote:
crazy4lsu
Here is one of our resident virus expert, covid fear monger, mRNA expert and advocate, and vaccine mandate advocate.
I think crazy is the key phrase.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:28 pm to LSUbest
quote:
our resident virus expert
Yes
quote:
covid fear monger
Nah. I was accurate about its TFR for each demographic.
quote:
mRNA expert and advocate
Yeah it is a good technology and a promising platform.
quote:
vaccine mandate advocate.
Nah.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:31 pm to TigerDoc
It is idiocy hidden behind credentialism. She is repeating 19th-century understanding of how pathogens operate and repeating it as fact. Very boring stuff.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:36 pm to crazy4lsu
quote:
Yeah it is a good technology and a promising platform.
So good it never was approved in the US because it never passed clinical trials.
quote:
Nah.
I remember all the things you said during the covid scam.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:38 pm to LSUbest
It has passed trials
This is not true.
quote:.
So good it never was approved in the US because it never passed clinical trials.
This is not true.
This post was edited on 8/12/25 at 12:43 pm
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:38 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
TigerDoc
Certified wackadoodle
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:41 pm to LSUbest
quote:
So good it never was approved in the US because it never passed clinical trials.
It is a brand new technology. There wasn’t an acellular vaccine until there was. The same is true of subunit vaccines, etc. There are several new trials that are promising.
quote:
I remember all the things you said during the covid scam.
Good, then you should remember why I said a vaccine mandate was pointless.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:50 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
mRNA Vaccine Trials Pass mRNA vaccines, specifically those developed by Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech, successfully passed Phase 3 clinical trials in the United States in the fall of 2020.
These trials demonstrated a 95% relative risk reduction in symptomatic COVID-19, leading the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to grant Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) for these vaccines on December 11, 2020.
The Phase 3 trials were pivotal in authorizing the vaccines, although they were not originally designed to have sufficient statistical power to conclusively determine reductions in severe disease, hospitalization, or death due to the low number of severe cases observed.
Moderna's trial reported no cases of severe COVID-19 among vaccinated participants, which the company highlighted as 100% efficacy against severe illness, while one COVID-19-related death occurred in the placebo group.
Moderna's vaccine development was supported by funding from the U.S. government's Operation Warp Speed, which helped accelerate the clinical trial process.
quote:
Messenger RNA (mRNA) technology has a history spanning decades, with key scientific breakthroughs enabling its eventual success in clinical trials and vaccine development.
The foundational discovery of mRNA occurred in the early 1960s, and research into delivering mRNA into cells advanced during the 1970s.
A pivotal moment came in 1984 when researchers at Harvard University synthesized biologically active mRNA in a lab, a method still used today.
In 1987, Dr. Robert W. Malone demonstrated that human cells and frog embryos could absorb mRNA delivered via fat droplets and subsequently produce proteins, marking an early step toward mRNA vaccine development.
Despite these advances, mRNA faced significant challenges, including instability and rapid degradation in the body, which limited its clinical application.
This changed in 2005 when Dr. Katalin Karikó and Dr. Drew Weissman discovered that modifying synthetic mRNA prevented it from triggering a harmful immune response, a breakthrough that accelerated the field.
The development of lipid nanoparticles (LNPs) to encapsulate and protect mRNA allowed for efficient delivery into cells, solving earlier technical hurdles.
The first human clinical trials for mRNA vaccines began in 2013, testing an mRNA rabies vaccine.
Prior to that, in the 1990s, mRNA vaccines were tested in animal models, including mice for influenza and cancer applications.
Although research continued through the 2000s, funding and interest were limited due to the fragility and high cost of mRNA production.
The turning point came during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines underwent large-scale clinical trials in 2020, demonstrating high efficacy and favorable safety profiles.
The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine received full FDA approval in August 2021 for individuals aged 16 and older, becoming the first mRNA vaccine to achieve this status in the U.S..
Since then, mRNA vaccines have advanced into clinical trials for other diseases, including influenza, HIV, cancer immunotherapies, and rare genetic disorders
Safe and Effective
Get the shot and you won't get covid
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:55 pm to LSUbest
You studied biology. You're capable of understanding that if you're interested or you could pill yourself into rejecting germ theory like Hognutz or something.
Posted on 8/12/25 at 12:58 pm to NIH
No. you are a feckless pussy for not admitting that Trump gave the decision to Governors if they wanted to open or close their state. In Florida, we shut down for 7 days and when everything reopened, it was business as usual in the panhandle and across the state. The Governors then put the decision on the local mayors if they wanted to open or close their cities.
Last time I checked, that's two people in front of Trump that made decisions about their states and cities - 1) The Governor of the State, 2) The Mayors of each city.
What fricking part of "Trump gave the decisions to each state's Governor" do you not understand?
Last time I checked, that's two people in front of Trump that made decisions about their states and cities - 1) The Governor of the State, 2) The Mayors of each city.
What fricking part of "Trump gave the decisions to each state's Governor" do you not understand?
Posted on 8/12/25 at 1:06 pm to ItzMe1972
Nothing but a globalist practice run of a big psy op and experiment in mass mind control and behavioral modification. To see who would blindly obey and who wouldn't. Notice they came out real aggressively and hard in their rhetoric against those who exercised their independence and civil liberties.
This post was edited on 8/12/25 at 1:27 pm
Popular
Back to top



1





