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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.

They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.

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  • HoraceH Offline
    HoraceH Offline
    Horace
    wrote on last edited by
    #33

    I'm not clear in practice what RFK would do about them if confirmed. Based on the confirmation hearings, not much. More testing? Ok, frame that as "deadly" if you will, and the rest of us can discard the rhetoric. The point about aspirin not making it through the FDA today is well-taken. Maybe all of our existing regulations are "deadly" too, if one wanted to make the rhetorical case. Such cases are not objective truth, they are just a perspective.

    I sure will carry for the rest of my life a mild resentment that I was forced to take the COVID vaccine, or lose my livelihood.

    Education is extremely important.

    jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
    • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

      @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

      I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

      Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

      However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

      LuFins DadL Offline
      LuFins DadL Offline
      LuFins Dad
      wrote on last edited by
      #34

      @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

      @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

      I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

      Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

      However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

      Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

      There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

      I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

      The Brad

      Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
      • HoraceH Horace

        I'm not clear in practice what RFK would do about them if confirmed. Based on the confirmation hearings, not much. More testing? Ok, frame that as "deadly" if you will, and the rest of us can discard the rhetoric. The point about aspirin not making it through the FDA today is well-taken. Maybe all of our existing regulations are "deadly" too, if one wanted to make the rhetorical case. Such cases are not objective truth, they are just a perspective.

        I sure will carry for the rest of my life a mild resentment that I was forced to take the COVID vaccine, or lose my livelihood.

        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nycJ Online
        jon-nyc
        wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
        #35

        @Horace

        I agree it's not immediately obvious why a placebo controlled P4 trial in childhood vaccines would be dangerous, at least for those who haven't attended 'how to be paper-thin in clinical trials' class.

        In certain fields of medicine, placebo-controlled trials are the gold standard, and many vaccines have undergone them. However, when there is already an effective treatment, forcing half your trial participants to forego the treatment in order to be test subjects for a potentially better treatment is considered unethical. In these cases they often run 'non-inferiority' trials, where they compare the new treatment to the old and if the new treatment is not inferior, it gets approval.

        This is most common in oncology, where the ethics are really obvious since the endpoint is mortality. Imagine there a cancer that kills you in 3 months. We have a treatment that keeps 30% of the people alive five years and increases the median survival to, say, a year. Now someone introduces a potential better treatment. You really going to force half the people on placebo? No, you'd give half the existing treatment and the other half the new.

        In a placebo controlled measles vaccine trial you would be consigning some percentage of the control group to a measles diagnosis. In a large enough trial, the worst outcomes would appear.

        On top of that, as I've mentioned before, the mere fact of putting an official stamp on questioning the safety of these vaccines would encourage many more people to avoid them, with the predictable consequences. This indeed has already happened (the avoidance, its still too early for the consequences)

        Only non-witches get due process.

        • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
        HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
        • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

          @Horace

          I agree it's not immediately obvious why a placebo controlled P4 trial in childhood vaccines would be dangerous, at least for those who haven't attended 'how to be paper-thin in clinical trials' class.

          In certain fields of medicine, placebo-controlled trials are the gold standard, and many vaccines have undergone them. However, when there is already an effective treatment, forcing half your trial participants to forego the treatment in order to be test subjects for a potentially better treatment is considered unethical. In these cases they often run 'non-inferiority' trials, where they compare the new treatment to the old and if the new treatment is not inferior, it gets approval.

          This is most common in oncology, where the ethics are really obvious since the endpoint is mortality. Imagine there a cancer that kills you in 3 months. We have a treatment that keeps 30% of the people alive five years and increases the median survival to, say, a year. Now someone introduces a potential better treatment. You really going to force half the people on placebo? No, you'd give half the existing treatment and the other half the new.

          In a placebo controlled measles vaccine trial you would be consigning some percentage of the control group to a measles diagnosis. In a large enough trial, the worst outcomes would appear.

          On top of that, as I've mentioned before, the mere fact of putting an official stamp on questioning the safety of these vaccines would encourage many more people to avoid them, with the predictable consequences. This indeed has already happened (the avoidance, its still too early for the consequences)

          HoraceH Offline
          HoraceH Offline
          Horace
          wrote on last edited by
          #36

          @jon-nyc I have no issue with that case you made, and I agree that it's a weakness of RFK, and I hope he continues to back off the anti-vax rhetoric, which he demonstrably did during his confirmation hearings. I continue to find it easy to believe that RFK can net out as a positive, if he can use his platform to message convincingly against typical American eating habits.

          Education is extremely important.

          1 Reply Last reply
          • jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nyc
            wrote on last edited by
            #37

            I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

            Only non-witches get due process.

            • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
            LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
            • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

              @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

              @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

              I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

              Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

              However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

              Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

              There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

              I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

              Doctor PhibesD Offline
              Doctor PhibesD Offline
              Doctor Phibes
              wrote on last edited by
              #38

              @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

              @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

              @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

              I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

              Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

              However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

              Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

              There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

              I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

              Now do the polio vaccine.

              I was only joking

              LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
              • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

                LuFins DadL Offline
                LuFins DadL Offline
                LuFins Dad
                wrote on last edited by
                #39

                @jon-nyc said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

                I doubt he is. The head golf the committee is a physician with serious questions about Juniors views.

                The Brad

                jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
                • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                  @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                  Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                  However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                  Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

                  There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

                  I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

                  Now do the polio vaccine.

                  LuFins DadL Offline
                  LuFins DadL Offline
                  LuFins Dad
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #40

                  @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                  I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                  Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                  However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                  Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

                  There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

                  I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

                  Now do the polio vaccine.

                  Which one?

                  The Brad

                  Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                  • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                    Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                    However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                    Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

                    There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

                    I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

                    Now do the polio vaccine.

                    Which one?

                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor Phibes
                    wrote on last edited by Doctor Phibes
                    #41

                    @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                    I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                    Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                    However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                    Personally, I don’t think he’s clearing confirmation. And I agree with @jon-nyc that some of his anti-vax rhetoric has serious implications, even if no official actions are taken. But I also think it’s an issue whether he’s approved or not. The multitude of lies put out by public health has a lot of people not taking things at face value anymore.

                    There is overwhelming scientific evidence that says vaccines are safe. Great, says the skeptic… That overwhelming scientific evidence is being provided by the same groups that said 15 Days to Flatten the Curve, and told us that masks were ineffective…, then said they were, then not really, then told us to not step into public without one. The same public health and scientific researchers that said COVID was absolutely not a lab leak and obviously came from pangolins in a wet market. They told us the vax would prevent spread and we wouldn’t get sick. Then changed to we’ll get a little sick, but won’t spread. Then, yeah, you can still spread but Natural Immunity doesn’t exist, so what else are you going to do? Oh wait, Natural Immunity doesn’t exist work pretty equivalently to the vax, but the vaccine is safer… Unless you’re a kid. Or a teen. Or a young adult…

                    I can excuse those people for looking at the huge piles of scientific evidence about the safety of vaccines and being a little skeptical.

                    Now do the polio vaccine.

                    Which one?

                    My point is it's not just the Covid vaccine he doesn't like.

                    Meanwhile, infant mortality is at an all time low. Let's not try and fix that, eh?

                    I was only joking

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

                      @jon-nyc said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                      I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

                      I doubt he is. The head golf the committee is a physician with serious questions about Juniors views.

                      jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nycJ Online
                      jon-nyc
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #42

                      @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                      @jon-nyc said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                      I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

                      I doubt he is. The head golf the committee is a physician with serious questions about Juniors views.

                      Cassidy. Very skeptical. There’s actually two committees of jurisdiction, the other is the Senate Finance Committee who’s head, Mike Crapo, is not a physician but his brother is.

                      I think the Turtle, Murkowski, and Collins will be no votes if there’s a fourth to make it stick.

                      Only non-witches get due process.

                      • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                      JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                        @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                        I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                        Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                        However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                        RenaudaR Offline
                        RenaudaR Offline
                        Renauda
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #43

                        @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                        @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                        I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation.

                        Yes, he occasionally hits a target. The American diet is something else we should all be thinking about.

                        However, either he's seriously anti-vaccination, or he's cynically exploited people's fears in order to gain support. Neither alternative is good.

                        What RFK jr. is most authoritative and actually very lucid in his thinking is on water conservation and management. The Trump regime of course, won’t let him anywhere near that and have in fact effectively muzzled him on the sidelines.

                        But as I have already stated RFK Jr. is not an optimal choice for portfolio to which he has been now confirmed. I am certain that he will prove to be just another of many distractions in the Trumpian sown chaos before us.

                        Elbows up!

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • jon-nycJ Online
                          jon-nycJ Online
                          jon-nyc
                          wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                          #44

                          To clarify, he hasn’t been confirmed yet. I’m not sure when the votes happen.

                          Only non-witches get due process.

                          • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • RenaudaR Offline
                            RenaudaR Offline
                            Renauda
                            wrote on last edited by Renauda
                            #45

                            @jon-nyc

                            My mistake, I thought he received the green light late yesterday afternoon.

                            Anyway the point of my post remains as is.

                            Elbows up!

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                              @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                              @jon-nyc said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                              I hope so too, assuming he's confirmed.

                              I doubt he is. The head golf the committee is a physician with serious questions about Juniors views.

                              Cassidy. Very skeptical. There’s actually two committees of jurisdiction, the other is the Senate Finance Committee who’s head, Mike Crapo, is not a physician but his brother is.

                              I think the Turtle, Murkowski, and Collins will be no votes if there’s a fourth to make it stick.

                              JollyJ Offline
                              JollyJ Offline
                              Jolly
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #46

                              Cassidy is a doc, of course.

                              But if he votes down RFK, I'll lay money he will not be running for reelection.

                              “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                              Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • jon-nycJ Online
                                jon-nycJ Online
                                jon-nyc
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #47

                                He faces an uphill battle anyway for voting to convict Trump. Todays GOP is no place for a politician who puts principles above loyalty to Trump.

                                The interesting thing is he was practically begging RFK to renounce the autism claim so he could vote for him. Kennedy wouldn’t.

                                I won’t be remotely surprised if he is a no vote. But he’ll be yes out of committee.

                                And I agree that the decision not to back RFK will be the decision not to seek reelection.

                                But careful what you wish for, once he decides he’s not running for reelection he can vote his conscience from here on out.

                                Only non-witches get due process.

                                • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • JollyJ Offline
                                  JollyJ Offline
                                  Jolly
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #48

                                  His nickname among the harder right folks down here is Psycho Bill...

                                  “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                  Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                  Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                                  • JollyJ Jolly

                                    His nickname among the harder right folks down here is Psycho Bill...

                                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                                    Doctor Phibes
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #49

                                    @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                    His nickname among the harder right folks down here is Psycho Bill...

                                    I hate to think what they must call RFK

                                    I was only joking

                                    JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                    • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                                      @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                      His nickname among the harder right folks down here is Psycho Bill...

                                      I hate to think what they must call RFK

                                      JollyJ Offline
                                      JollyJ Offline
                                      Jolly
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #50

                                      @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                      @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                      His nickname among the harder right folks down here is Psycho Bill...

                                      I hate to think what they must call RFK

                                      Mr. Secretary?

                                      “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                      Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      • JollyJ Jolly

                                        @LuFins-Dad said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                        @Doctor-Phibes said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                        Before he was bought out by Trump, most normal conservatives (as opposed to whacky conspiracy theorists) admitted he was crazy. Now, apparently he's something else.

                                        No, many of us still think he’s nuts and possibly dangerous. I will say that his stuff about the food dyes and some of the preservatives deserve a serious conversation. I mean, why the heck are they using dyes in ibuprofen, Benadryl, etc?

                                        I think he's wrong in some of his views. Trump has already assured people he had a long talk with RFK on vaccines before nominating him. He's been told hands off, particularly in regard to the older, standard childhood vaccines.

                                        OTOH, RFK has some views I agree with on sugar content, high fructose corn syrup, dyes in our food and medicine, population obesity and the cost of drugs in the U.S. vs. the rest of the world.

                                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                                        taiwan_girl
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #51

                                        @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                        RFK has some views I agree with on .....population obesity '

                                        Maybe I am mistaken but wasnt there a lot of "pushback" from the Republic's against Michelle Obama when she started a campaign to make school lunches healthier? 🤔

                                        https://www.newsweek.com/rfk-school-lunch-program-michelle-obama-republican-support-2023737

                                        JollyJ jon-nycJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                        • taiwan_girlT taiwan_girl

                                          @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                          RFK has some views I agree with on .....population obesity '

                                          Maybe I am mistaken but wasnt there a lot of "pushback" from the Republic's against Michelle Obama when she started a campaign to make school lunches healthier? 🤔

                                          https://www.newsweek.com/rfk-school-lunch-program-michelle-obama-republican-support-2023737

                                          JollyJ Offline
                                          JollyJ Offline
                                          Jolly
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #52

                                          @taiwan_girl said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                          @Jolly said in They haven't spoken over a few hours in years.:

                                          RFK has some views I agree with on .....population obesity '

                                          Maybe I am mistaken but wasnt there a lot of "pushback" from the Republic's against Michelle Obama when she started a campaign to make school lunches healthier? 🤔

                                          https://www.newsweek.com/rfk-school-lunch-program-michelle-obama-republican-support-2023737

                                          Lunch in the trash can is not a good use of tax dollars.

                                          “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                          Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                          jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
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