• Re: F1 makes covid vaccination mandatory in 2022

    From ~misfit~@21:1/5 to Mark Jackson on Tue Jan 18 12:52:04 2022
    On 18/01/2022 12:43 pm, Mark Jackson wrote:
    https://www.grandprix.com/news/f1-makes-covid-vaccination-mandatory-in-2022.html

    About time! Silly me had just assumed that this was already in place.
    --
    Shaun.

    "Humans will have advanced a long, long way when religious belief has a cozy little classification
    in the DSM"
    David Melville

    This is not an email and hasn't been checked for viruses by any half-arsed self-promoting software.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Mark Jackson@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 17 18:43:07 2022
    https://www.grandprix.com/news/f1-makes-covid-vaccination-mandatory-in-2022.html

    --
    Mark Jackson - https://mark-jackson.online/
    As for behavior, I have shocking news:
    Physicists can be arrogant. - Mike Tamor

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From texas gate@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 17 16:10:49 2022
    On Monday, January 17, 2022 at 4:52:07 PM UTC-7, ~misfit~ wrote:

    About time! Silly me had just assumed that this was already in place.

    you fag

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rtr@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jan 27 22:54:18 2022
    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.

    --
    Give them an inch and they will take a mile.
    --
    gemini://rtr.kalayaan.xyz

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Jackson@21:1/5 to rtr on Thu Jan 27 15:39:43 2022
    On 1/27/2022 9:54 AM, rtr wrote:

    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.

    ITYM "the skills and dedication" rather than "the money" - unless, of
    course, you didn't bother to read the actual article.

    Hint: this covers F1 staff (including drivers), not the folks in the
    stands; that's up to the organizers of each race (and their national government).

    --
    Mark Jackson - https://mark-jackson.online/
    As for behavior, I have shocking news:
    Physicists can be arrogant. - Mike Tamor

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From geoff@21:1/5 to rtr on Fri Jan 28 11:25:55 2022
    On 28/01/2022 3:54 am, rtr wrote:

    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.


    Not that it wouldn't be a good idea to get vaxxed in the first place -
    if not for your own benefit, for that of who you may spread the nasty to.

    geoff

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rtr@21:1/5 to Mark Jackson on Sat Jan 29 08:07:44 2022
    Mark Jackson <mjackson@alumni.caltech.edu> writes:

    On 1/27/2022 9:54 AM, rtr wrote:
    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.

    ITYM "the skills and dedication" rather than "the money" - unless, of
    course, you didn't bother to read the actual article.

    Hint: this covers F1 staff (including drivers), not the folks in the
    stands; that's up to the organizers of each race (and their national government).

    Yeah, I know. It's just that F1 doesn't take place in my country. The
    closest one is a flight away and without vaccines that wouldn't happen.

    --
    Give them an inch and they will take a mile.
    --
    gemini://rtr.kalayaan.xyz

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rtr@21:1/5 to geoff on Sat Jan 29 08:08:03 2022
    geoff <geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org> writes:

    On 28/01/2022 3:54 am, rtr wrote:
    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.


    Not that it wouldn't be a good idea to get vaxxed in the first place -
    if not for your own benefit, for that of who you may spread the nasty
    to.


    That is true.

    --
    Give them an inch and they will take a mile.
    --
    gemini://rtr.kalayaan.xyz

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From texas gate@21:1/5 to geoff on Sat Jan 29 07:09:23 2022
    On Thursday, January 27, 2022 at 3:26:10 PM UTC-7, geoff wrote:

    Not that it wouldn't be a good idea to get vaxxed in the first place -
    if not for your own benefit, for that of who you may spread the nasty to.

    fuck off you dumb cunt

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Bob Latham@21:1/5 to rtr on Sat Jan 29 19:03:52 2022
    In article <874k5nxv30.fsf@haraya.local.net>,
    rtr <rtr@haraya.invalid> wrote:
    geoff <geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org> writes:

    On 28/01/2022 3:54 am, rtr wrote:
    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.


    Not that it wouldn't be a good idea to get vaxxed in the first
    place - if not for your own benefit, for that of who you may
    spread the nasty to.


    That is true.

    Is it?

    I'm not for one second saying you shouldn't get vaxxed I have, I've
    had all 3 offered. They may help me cope and hopefully recover should
    I get infected. But if you believe that those vaccines will protect
    you against getting Omicron or will prevent you spreading it you've
    not been paying attention, even researchers are admitting this now.

    Try looking at the triple jabbed, mask wearing, passport weilding
    Israel where they're now doing their fourth jab and their infection
    rate only a couple of days ago was near a vertical line on the graph.
    Israel is not alone.

    The entire argument of get vaxxed to protect others has collapsed
    with vaccine dodging Omicron, though get vaxxed to protect the NHS
    load, still may have some milage left.

    Sorry, not anti-vax but facing the truth.



    Bob.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From texas gate@21:1/5 to rtr on Sun Jan 30 11:05:03 2022
    On Sunday, January 30, 2022 at 12:00:26 PM UTC-7, rtr wrote:

    Oh crap. I misread the post that I was replying to. English is hard sometimes. Thanks for pointing that out Bob.

    I'm not vaccinated. I just don't see the point in it. I'm young
    and relatively healthy. I've had COVID and it's not as bad to me as
    it were for other people.

    I agree. All this time I always thought that once you're vaccinated that you'll be immune to a particular disease or at the very best you'll
    exhibit extremely minor symptoms of it. I am vaccinated against
    chickenpox and when we had a minor outbreak of it here I just had one
    small chickenpox thing in my arm.

    Somehow, being vaccinated in 202{1,2} means that you'll still get the
    disease and exhibit symptoms (but it's not going to be worse?) and that you'll still transmit the virus (but it's not as much?) or if you do
    die from COVID (that your death will be less painful?).

    My girlfriend got COVID last year. She was fully vaccinated then and she
    had it really bad. She lost her sense of taste and almost lost her
    voice because she was coughing really hard. She also had a really high
    fever that lasted for a week and she wasn't alright for two weeks after
    that. It's been about a few months now and certain foods still doesn't
    taste right for her.

    When I got COVID early this year, I just had a really bad fever for
    three days and mild cough for the next five. By day 8, I'm
    practically back to working order.

    So yeah, I never really understood the urgency and doomsaying of those
    people that wants everyone to take the vaccine. If the vaccine immunizes
    the ones who took it then those people shouldn't be concerned about the
    other unvaccinated people spreading it because they're already
    immunized.

    Or am I wrong and I don't understand how vaccines work?

    fuck off

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From rtr@21:1/5 to Bob Latham on Sun Jan 30 16:08:54 2022
    Bob Latham <bob@sick-of-spam.invalid> writes:

    In article <874k5nxv30.fsf@haraya.local.net>,
    rtr <rtr@haraya.invalid> wrote:
    geoff <geoff@nospamgeoffwood.org> writes:

    On 28/01/2022 3:54 am, rtr wrote:
    This makes me sad. Not that I have the money to go a GP in the
    first place.


    Not that it wouldn't be a good idea to get vaxxed in the first
    place - if not for your own benefit, for that of who you may
    spread the nasty to.


    That is true.

    Is it?

    I'm not for one second saying you shouldn't get vaxxed I have, I've
    had all 3 offered. They may help me cope and hopefully recover should
    I get infected. But if you believe that those vaccines will protect
    you against getting Omicron or will prevent you spreading it you've
    not been paying attention, even researchers are admitting this now.

    Try looking at the triple jabbed, mask wearing, passport weilding
    Israel where they're now doing their fourth jab and their infection
    rate only a couple of days ago was near a vertical line on the graph.
    Israel is not alone.

    The entire argument of get vaxxed to protect others has collapsed
    with vaccine dodging Omicron, though get vaxxed to protect the NHS
    load, still may have some milage left.

    Sorry, not anti-vax but facing the truth.



    Bob.


    Oh crap. I misread the post that I was replying to. English is hard
    sometimes. Thanks for pointing that out Bob.

    I'm not vaccinated. I just don't see the point in it. I'm young
    and relatively healthy. I've had COVID and it's not as bad to me as
    it were for other people.

    I agree. All this time I always thought that once you're vaccinated that
    you'll be immune to a particular disease or at the very best you'll
    exhibit extremely minor symptoms of it. I am vaccinated against
    chickenpox and when we had a minor outbreak of it here I just had one
    small chickenpox thing in my arm.

    Somehow, being vaccinated in 202{1,2} means that you'll still get the
    disease and exhibit symptoms (but it's not going to be worse?) and that
    you'll still transmit the virus (but it's not as much?) or if you do
    die from COVID (that your death will be less painful?).

    My girlfriend got COVID last year. She was fully vaccinated then and she
    had it really bad. She lost her sense of taste and almost lost her
    voice because she was coughing really hard. She also had a really high
    fever that lasted for a week and she wasn't alright for two weeks after
    that. It's been about a few months now and certain foods still doesn't
    taste right for her.

    When I got COVID early this year, I just had a really bad fever for
    three days and mild cough for the next five. By day 8, I'm
    practically back to working order.

    So yeah, I never really understood the urgency and doomsaying of those
    people that wants everyone to take the vaccine. If the vaccine immunizes
    the ones who took it then those people shouldn't be concerned about the
    other unvaccinated people spreading it because they're already
    immunized.

    Or am I wrong and I don't understand how vaccines work?

    --
    Give them an inch and they will take a mile.
    --
    gemini://rtr.kalayaan.xyz

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)