What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?
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@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One specific example, a video for Candace Owens popped up for me on some platform.
I hadn’t heard her in a year. I was just curious what she’d be talking about these days - and sure enough it was her talking about evil forces behind the vaccine.
You have made an error. It's the kind of error that's typical of those who lean left - you reworded her position and made it the opposite of the truth. Owens does not and never has talked about the evil forces behind the vaccine. Not once. In fact, when talking about the vaccine, she has done the exact opposite of what you say she's done. She supports the vaccine, and has consistently done so. The "evil forces" ( your words, not hers) she refers to are those trying to use government to force people take the vaccine, and the abuse of power involved and the assault on our Constitution it causes.
There is a HUGE difference between those two things. I'm not sure if you consciously misrepresented her position, or if you honestly dont understand what you did.
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@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
What is the main logical thrust of the current hesitancy?
You are asking the wrong guys.
I think the posters here are 100% vaccinated, with some natural immunity thrown in.
They are just guessing.
None of them have the wherewithal to face the world without a vaccine to prop them up.
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@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One county does not a country make.
It's a good enough sample size. There's a trend. The more conservative, white, and Trump-supporting you are, the higher the chance you're unvaccinated.
You can also play the same game with urban minorities, too, and get pretty much the same results. Or with granola-munchers. Both of which are liberal-minded, so hey, that's two whole points for your team's column. Winning.
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@larry said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One specific example, a video for Candace Owens popped up for me on some platform.
I hadn’t heard her in a year. I was just curious what she’d be talking about these days - and sure enough it was her talking about evil forces behind the vaccine.
You have made an error. It's the kind of error that's typical of those who lean left - you reworded her position and made it the opposite of the truth. Owens does not and never has talked about the evil forces behind the vaccine. Not once. In fact, when talking about the vaccine, she has done the exact opposite of what you say she's done. She supports the vaccine, and has consistently done so. The "evil forces" ( your words, not hers) she refers to are those trying to use government to force people take the vaccine, and the abuse of power involved and the assault on our Constitution it causes.
There is a HUGE difference between those two things. I'm not sure if you consciously misrepresented her position, or if you honestly dont understand what you did.
Right - she was talking about nefarious forces (people pushing mandates, drug companies trying to make profits, etc.). She follows a common tack of “just asking questions”. She spends most of her time (and I just checked, most of her Twitter feed), talking about how the vaccines have a lot of downsides. She’s not vaccinated herself either. She’s very vocal about that. But she stops short of saying “no one should get the vax”
The interesting thing for me was this correlation to politics. That she would spend time on her platform about politics talking about vaccine efficacy and safety.
That’s the correlation to politics I’m talking about.
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@aqua-letifer said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One county does not a country make.
It's a good enough sample size. There's a trend. The more conservative, white, and Trump-supporting you are, the higher the chance you're unvaccinated.
You can also play the same game with urban minorities, too, and get pretty much the same results. Or with granola-munchers. Both of which are liberal-minded, so hey, that's two whole points for your team's column. Winning.
Winning, or just the Truth?
And don't forget to through those PhD's in, who also tend to vote for the Dems...
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@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@aqua-letifer said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One county does not a country make.
It's a good enough sample size. There's a trend. The more conservative, white, and Trump-supporting you are, the higher the chance you're unvaccinated.
You can also play the same game with urban minorities, too, and get pretty much the same results. Or with granola-munchers. Both of which are liberal-minded, so hey, that's two whole points for your team's column. Winning.
Winning, or just the Truth?
This is just another conservatives-good-liberals-bad proxy discussion, which I want no part of.
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@aqua-letifer said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@aqua-letifer said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One county does not a country make.
It's a good enough sample size. There's a trend. The more conservative, white, and Trump-supporting you are, the higher the chance you're unvaccinated.
You can also play the same game with urban minorities, too, and get pretty much the same results. Or with granola-munchers. Both of which are liberal-minded, so hey, that's two whole points for your team's column. Winning.
Winning, or just the Truth?
This is just another conservatives-good-liberals-bad proxy discussion, which I want no part of.
Then get your head out of your ass and ignore the one-size-fits-all tendencies. Vaccine hesitancy is not the purview of a single group.
Yes, it's more prevalent among rural people, especially younger ones. I guess it's because they think they are at lower risk for the disease and really low risk for death or bad outcomes. I don't agree with them, but I understand.
I also understand about the urban minority population and their distrust.
I don't understand the PhD angle.
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According to that opinion piece by John Nolte published on Breitbart, the Conservatives are tricked into not getting the vaccine by the Liberals’ reverse psychology tactic of telling people to get the vaccine, so the reason Conservatives suffer heavy COVID-19 casualties is because the Conservatives are pwned by the Liberals’ reverse psychology.
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@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@larry said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One specific example, a video for Candace Owens popped up for me on some platform.
I hadn’t heard her in a year. I was just curious what she’d be talking about these days - and sure enough it was her talking about evil forces behind the vaccine.
You have made an error. It's the kind of error that's typical of those who lean left - you reworded her position and made it the opposite of the truth. Owens does not and never has talked about the evil forces behind the vaccine. Not once. In fact, when talking about the vaccine, she has done the exact opposite of what you say she's done. She supports the vaccine, and has consistently done so. The "evil forces" ( your words, not hers) she refers to are those trying to use government to force people take the vaccine, and the abuse of power involved and the assault on our Constitution it causes.
There is a HUGE difference between those two things. I'm not sure if you consciously misrepresented her position, or if you honestly dont understand what you did.
Right - she was talking about nefarious forces (people pushing mandates, drug companies trying to make profits, etc.). She follows a common tack of “just asking questions”. She spends most of her time (and I just checked, most of her Twitter feed), talking about how the vaccines have a lot of downsides. She’s not vaccinated herself either. She’s very vocal about that. But she stops short of saying “no one should get the vax”
The interesting thing for me was this correlation to politics. That she would spend time on her platform about politics talking about vaccine efficacy and safety.
That’s the correlation to politics I’m talking about.
@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@larry said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@xenon said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One specific example, a video for Candace Owens popped up for me on some platform.
I hadn’t heard her in a year. I was just curious what she’d be talking about these days - and sure enough it was her talking about evil forces behind the vaccine.
You have made an error. It's the kind of error that's typical of those who lean left - you reworded her position and made it the opposite of the truth. Owens does not and never has talked about the evil forces behind the vaccine. Not once. In fact, when talking about the vaccine, she has done the exact opposite of what you say she's done. She supports the vaccine, and has consistently done so. The "evil forces" ( your words, not hers) she refers to are those trying to use government to force people take the vaccine, and the abuse of power involved and the assault on our Constitution it causes.
There is a HUGE difference between those two things. I'm not sure if you consciously misrepresented her position, or if you honestly dont understand what you did.
Right - she was talking about nefarious forces (people pushing mandates, drug companies trying to make profits, etc.). She follows a common tack of “just asking questions”. She spends most of her time (and I just checked, most of her Twitter feed), talking about how the vaccines have a lot of downsides. She’s not vaccinated herself either. She’s very vocal about that. But she stops short of saying “no one should get the vax”
The interesting thing for me was this correlation to politics. That she would spend time on her platform about politics talking about vaccine efficacy and safety.
That’s the correlation to politics I’m talking about.
I'm very well aware of the points she makes, as I have been watching her videos for several years now. But of course, since you are able to watch her one time and due to your intellectual superiority be able to understand her completely, I will bow to your ignorance and allow you to continue wallowing in it.
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Guys, on the political front it’s not really rocket science. There is a large number of people that simply distrust centralized government and authority. There is a large number of people that think the opposite and prefer a central authority and tight regulations. It makes perfect sense that there are those on the right that distrust the vaccine based on the Government’s involvement and push in the matter. Those people are also more likely to be very pro-Trump simply because he didn’t treat them like shit and call them deplorable. That doesn’t mean that he is in any way responsible for their reaction to the vaccine.
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@aqua-letifer said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
@jolly said in What’s the vaccine hesitancy driver?:
One county does not a country make.
It's a good enough sample size. There's a trend. The more conservative, white, and Trump-supporting you are, the higher the chance you're unvaccinated.
You can also play the same game with urban minorities, too, and get pretty much the same results. Or with granola-munchers. Both of which are liberal-minded, so hey, that's two whole points for your team's column. Winning.
^^ This.
And this is supported quite solidly by a number of statistics and studies. But so is the fact that Trump lost in a landslide (by his metric), so maybe math isn’t enough here to prove the point. Probably louder yelling is needed.
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All adults: 69 percent
Men: 67 percent
Women: 71 percent
18-34: 63 percent
35-49: 58 percent
50-64: 71 percent
65+: 86 percent
Whites: 66 percent
Blacks: 76 percent
Latinos: 71 percent
Urban residents: 79 percent
Suburban residents: 67 percent
Rural residents: 52 percent
White evangelicals: 59 percent
Democrats: 88 percent
Independents: 60 percent
Republicans: 55 percent
Republicans who support Trump more than party: 46 percent
Republicans who support party more than Trump: 62 percent
Democratic Sanders-Warren voters: 88 percent
Democratic Biden voters: 87 percent
Biden voters in 2020 general election: 91 percent
Trump voters in 2020 general election: 50 percent
White non-college grads: 60 percent
White college grads: 80 percent -
Furthermore, at about the 4:17 mark, the discussion is about how we are medically making some mistakes with our blanket use of vaccines and boosters.
As soon as that presenter finishes, might want to listen to the LSU doc about vaccine hesitancy...
Link to video