No. We need free choice. If you don't want to get the shot, that's your decision, and ultimately your problem.
Runnah, you obviously never met a sensual engineer.![]()
I'm actually not. that's what's crazy.You are completely missing the point.
Runnah, you obviously never met a sensual engineer.![]()
Are they hanging out with unicorns and bigfoot?
What do you think pix? Aren't you a doctor or somethingA bunch of photographers discussing medicine is like asking an engineer how to make love.
yea, you gotta ask a real blue collar worker....like a professional pipe layer.
The point about the H1N1 strain not being in that year's vaccine is irrelevant, and I don't care whether you're aware of that or not.
Technically its not just a personal problem.No. We need free choice. If you don't want to get the shot, that's your decision, and ultimately your problem.
It's a social one since by not having the jab you allow the disease to remain alive within the community (as a sufferer or carrier). As such it remains a social problem.
In theory since a disease is a living organism if you can immunise the population it ends up with no-where to live. With no-where to live it dies - in theory we want to work toward repeating what we did with smallpox - immunise and drive it out.
..and then i still have a 98% chance of actually getting the flu.
So why are kids still being vaccinated for it and other things like polio