Apparently they haven't seen how small the needle is that they use for the injections. A grain of salt would plug it, let alone a microchip. Typical uninformed conspiracy theory sheeple.- there are those the REALLY think the vaccine has a microchip in it - ( I got my first shot today so far so good)
Actually, they have chips that smallApparently they haven't seen how small the needle is that they use for the injections. A grain of salt would plug it, let alone a microchip. Typical uninformed conspiracy theory sheeple.
Hell, I never even felt it, wouldn't have known he gave me the injection if I didn't see him do it.
What frustrates many of us is using “science” to promote political agendas. Sure, there may be some facts involved, but in most cases, there’s also a lot of opinion that can easily be turned into humor.But what does frustrate me are comments made that seem a little crazy in the written text - but after one does a little research on the subject matter ...... find that statement to be more of fact than fiction.
I would agree with you if Gates was using a study that he concocted and ran himself with no peer review or other sources. However, he is instead referencing other studies that have been completed by those with college degrees specializing in that field. What you appear to be suggesting (not saying you are) is that only those with specific training can reference results of these studies and their results. While in fact almost the opposite is true.What frustrates many of us is using “science” to promote political agendas. Sure, there may be some facts involved, but in most cases, there’s also a lot of opinion that can easily be turned into humor.
Also, consider that Bill Gates has no science degree. In fact, he has no degree at all as a college dropout. That doesn’t make him dumb, but it doesn’t give him the science background that we should blindly believe. Well, unless you go around believing science promoted by other high school graduates.
No, I’m suggesting that science isn’t infallible, and a bad nonworkable solution is no solution at all. If you caught Bill’s interview or part of it, Bill’s suggestion is to not eat meat. We’ll get used to it. It’s politics disguised as science. I’m not saying there isn’t some science involved, but science like anything can be used to disquise an opinion when an opinion will work just as well.However, he is instead referencing other studies that have been completed by those with college degrees specializing in that field.
No one here stated that science is infallible, that's what peer review is for and why most things in scientific and mathematical fields are theories and not laws. For example the Pythagorean theorem is thousands of years old and has yet to be disproven but it is not a law, and there are only 4 known laws of thermodynamics, etc.. This demonstrates that the area is fallible and it knows it, which is why it relies so heavily on releasing methods and data so others can peer review it or try and assemble an experiment to disprove it. Also most any public figure uses science (or distrust of) to push their agenda. However, it is an easier sell (as it should be) with data to back it up which science provides.No, I’m suggesting that science isn’t infallible, and a bad nonworkable solution is no solution at all. If you caught Bill’s interview or part of it, Bill’s suggestion is to not eat meat. We’ll get used to it. It’s politics disguised as science. I’m not saying there isn’t some science involved, but science like anything can be used to disquise an opinion when an opinion will work just as well.
Fwiw, I’m pretty sure those who thought the world was flat were “scientists”. Different “scientists” thought some races were superior to others. I think most of us think those scientists even though the majority agreed were wrong. My point is science isn’t always right any more than any other field.
Btw, it seems we both chose a Kubota L2501, so I guess we both are part of the problem considering we didn’t by a DPF model.