higherup's comments

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Comparing SARS-CoV-2 natural immunity to vaccine-induced immunity [pdf]

> it would be impossible to hide.

There is nothing to hide if there is no data collected in the first place. Here in this video, you can see that even injuries sustained by people who took part in the trials are being rejected by the doctors citing as caused by "anxiety".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mxqC9SiRh8

I think people are completely oblivious to this issue, and is under this fallacy that if there was something wrong with the vaccines, then the information will automatically appear in public perception. If you think this, you need to only look at how smoking went on for a long time without the people noticing any problem with it.

With vaccines, we know that the signal is killed right at the point of generation, because the medical practicioners are conditioned (being charitable here) to reject any injury as not being caused by the Vaccines.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Comparing SARS-CoV-2 natural immunity to vaccine-induced immunity [pdf]

>Just get the vaccine, it's not hard.

Getting the Vaccine is easy. What is hard is to trust the what every biased, safety studies done on it and the fact the AEFI reporting system is not strictly mandated, indicating a bias from the authorities to not want to know about potential vaccine injuries.

As usual, this comment will get flagged. If you see this comment check back a bit later to see the shilling on HN.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Sputnik V: fraudulent clinical trial data

>I mean that groups without any conflict of interest can gather population level data and evaluate for themselves how effective the vaccines are,

It won't work because for every such group, there will be 10 groups with high conflict of interest that can counter any finding of your hypothetical group, and journals with conflict of interests will reject the findings of that group, but instead give high visibility to the reports of high-conflict of interest groups..

Quickly no one will dare to research the said topic.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Sputnik V: fraudulent clinical trial data

No it does not.

Because that would be like saying, just because all you got is a binocular with very limited magnification/resolving power, satelites for jupiter does not exist, because you cannot see them through it.

Someone should name this fallacy.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Sputnik V: fraudulent clinical trial data

>The beauty of science is that now that the vaccines are out there it becomes easier to independently access them and move our knowledge further in the right direction.

Can you clarify what you mean by this?

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Sputnik V: fraudulent clinical trial data

Yes, you are right. So either way, these vaccines has not passed through proper safety evaluation.

Just because something is not possible, does not make it any less required.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Sputnik V: fraudulent clinical trial data

>I am pretty sure Sputnik V is fine. It has been administered to tens of millions inside Russia itself. If there were massive problems with it, we would know by now.

No, we wouldn't. Because most of the Vaccine AEFI tracking is based on voluntary reporting, and is known to only report around 1% of the events.

Even if it was not the case, we wouldn't still know without a control group. Basically this is why systematic trials are done to measure these things.

So this logic does not absolve Sputnik vaccine, or any other current vaccines in use.

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp2033538

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Dying in the Name of Vaccine Freedom

Can someone tell me why VAERS reports are not strictly mandated for all observed AEFIs?

Anyone who says vaccines are safe, when there is no method to strictly monitor observed AEFIs, is perpetuating a blatent lie.

Without people having an option to reject a vaccine, and without an option to claim liability, and without an efficient AEFI monitoring in place, there is absolutely little incentive for the vaccine producers to ensure the quality. The is economics 101. It is sad that such blatant deceptions are possible in todays world...

And people who are refusing to bend down is fighting against this eventuality...shame on the shills who are making propoganda where they are cutting the branch they are sitting on...

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Mosquito saliva alone has profound effects on the human immune system (2018)

>very few people refuse to drive over the unlikely possibility of a fatal car accident, or live in a basement on the remote possibility that a tree or meteor will fall on their home.

That is because there is no media that is fear mongering on these things by reporting 24x7 on every car accident in gruesome details, and run reports on how driving in a car is very dangerous, when there is a chance that one of the thounsand other drivers that you come across on the road might be a crazed, drunk, distracted person that could hit you, support it with "statistics", and just because you survived the last trip, does not mean that you ll survive the next.

They will also run stories about these "anti-walk" persons who took a car or bike, but died in a horrible crashes.

The point is, everything is a line between risk and benefits, and when the risk and benefits are a matter of perception, media has great potential to come in and set where that line is..

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Mosquito saliva alone has profound effects on the human immune system (2018)

As I said in comment above, we know that drinking water cannot be bad for us, because all organism drank water all through their evolution, and if it was bad in some way, natural selection would have selected those that incurred damages caused by water drinking...

But it didn't happen even after so many years, so we know that drinking water did not make us less capable.

higherup | 4 years ago | on: Mosquito saliva alone has profound effects on the human immune system (2018)

Yes, you are absolutly correct.

The reason for this is that living things are evolved, rather than designed.

We have seen that even in very simple hardware, when using a genetically evolved design, we end up having circuits that functions as per the requirement [1]. But it ended up being very hard to figure out how the thing actually worked, and when components were removed that seemingly did not have any purpose, the thing stopped working.

And this, in my opinion, points to a very important aspect of evolved systems. We can only have a statistical assessment as you say. But no way to say for sure that, "This and this alone will be the only effect of an intervention".

But we can have some idea, depending on the type of intervention. For example, we can say that something that was part of the evolution, will not interfere with its working, simply because evolution has taken it into account during the process. And here comes the concept of something being "natural" to the organism. So we can say that stuff that is taken orally, is much safer than injected stuff. All through our evolution, we have been taking stuff orally. So a Vaccine is much more like throwing a spanner into our workings, than taking something taken orally. Similarly stuff that were part of our natural environment, during evolution can be considered as safer, as opposed to stuff that were not.

I think this is why mocking the concept of "natural", by saying, "Everything is natural, because it is found in nature", is embarrassingly missing the point..

[1] https://www.damninteresting.com/on-the-origin-of-circuits/

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