CV19 - Cure Worse Than The Disease? (Vol 19)

CV19 - Cure Worse Than The Disease? (Vol 19)

Author
Discussion

Unreal

3,415 posts

26 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
isaldiri said:
Unreal said:
Confirmation bias has nothing to do with the indisputable fact that the BBC and other outlets parroted the government line and omitted counter arguments and discussions. Confirmation bias is of course likely if you go looking for certain things. I expect supposedly unbiased sources to present me with a range of views. Unfortunately I'm increasingly told that an alternative view is the equivalent of flat earth theory so it doesn't need to be included. See climate change by way of an example. The BBC presents man made climate change as indisputable fact, just like 'the science' was forced on everyone during the pandemic. I don't have a problem with bias if it's honestly stated. I have a big problem with organisations that won't admit their obvious bias as it undermines trust in anything they say.
Well you have a big problem if one is ever going to believe that any organisation, particularly one of the size and reach of the BBC and other outlets are not going to be biased in some way or another. Or that the likes of zerohedge are going to admit what their particular biases are nevermind 'honestly state' them.
My belief that no organisation can be completely trusted, whether it's the BBC, zerohedge or some random on youtube or here doesn't cause me any problems whatsoever. Quite the opposite. It's a positive benefit.

Roderick Spode

3,112 posts

50 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
My history teacher at school said - "everyone is biased. Always test your sources, and corroborate where possible with trusted sources..."

This was evident throughout the last four years. TV, online & print media all ceased critical thinking and analysis, and instead started reporting government narrative as facts - "safe and effective, 15 million jabs to freedom, etc" whilst portraying anyone who dared question or applied critical thinking as "far-right alt-loon anti-vaxxer conspiracy nutters." There have been contributors to this suite of threads over the years who have cheerfully labelled any cynical opinion as just this. It stifles debate & shuts down reasoned analysis, meaning there is no longer a rational middle ground where opinions may be explored & amended, rather two polarised extremes throwing accusations at each other. It's entirely pointless.

There will never be a full exploration of vaccine harms by the mainstream media, for the reason that to do so would completely undermine public trust in the very organisations that pushed the narrative in the first place. Obviously government(s) will not wish that to happen either, as public trust (such as it is) would be irreparably damaged.

Unreal

3,415 posts

26 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Roderick Spode said:
My history teacher at school said - "everyone is biased. Always test your sources, and corroborate where possible with trusted sources..."

This was evident throughout the last four years. TV, online & print media all ceased critical thinking and analysis, and instead started reporting government narrative as facts - "safe and effective, 15 million jabs to freedom, etc" whilst portraying anyone who dared question or applied critical thinking as "far-right alt-loon anti-vaxxer conspiracy nutters." There have been contributors to this suite of threads over the years who have cheerfully labelled any cynical opinion as just this. It stifles debate & shuts down reasoned analysis, meaning there is no longer a rational middle ground where opinions may be explored & amended, rather two polarised extremes throwing accusations at each other. It's entirely pointless.

There will never be a full exploration of vaccine harms by the mainstream media, for the reason that to do so would completely undermine public trust in the very organisations that pushed the narrative in the first place. Obviously government(s) will not wish that to happen either, as public trust (such as it is) would be irreparably damaged.
This is why we only get to the truth around events such as Bloody Sunday, the Birmingham Pub bombings or Hillsborough many decades later, when the liars, decision makers and most witnesses are dead or retired and any admissions can be cheerfully dismissed as happening at a different time and couldn't happen today. This enables fullsome apologies to be made on behalf of people no longer in authority and swerve accountability whilst claiming some sort of moral high ground.

21st Century Man

40,926 posts

249 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Don't forget that the special powers act largely muzzled the media, they were obliged to follow and support the narrative and not to ask too many questions. They didn't seem to struggle much with that either.

Elysium

13,835 posts

188 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
I read this article from Unherd yesterday which discusses the way that the fact checking ‘industry’ massively impacts ad revenue for news websites and in effect starts to limit the boundaries of public discourse.

This commercial self censorship was apparent throughout COVID

https://unherd.com/2024/04/inside-the-disinformati...

r3g

3,182 posts

25 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
JC on Bridgen's speech : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kd99uVOMWEk

Good comments under the video.

"@69mosshead
1 hour ago
The lack of MP's there shows their contempt for the public."

Yes, indeed.

But no biggie, all in the past now, everyone has "moved on", despite a large propoprtion of the UK pop being dead under the excess deaths count, or simply laid up "sick" with unexplainable mystery health issues.

I'm sure the usual rabble-rousers here will dismiss the speech as being "utter pish" because it's not on the BBC.

R Mutt

5,893 posts

73 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Elysium said:
I read this article from Unherd yesterday which discusses the way that the fact checking ‘industry’ massively impacts ad revenue for news websites and in effect starts to limit the boundaries of public discourse.

This commercial self censorship was apparent throughout COVID

https://unherd.com/2024/04/inside-the-disinformati...
That is disgusting, and describing it as 'fact-checking' is too charitable. Or maybe not, if one feels an agenda whereby you're shut down for example publishing a JK Rowling interview, is valid.

But I have as much respect for 'fact checkers' as many have for 'conspiracy theorists'.

I think 'disinformation' being from the Russian 'dezinformatsia' puts it into context i.e. facts the Soviets didn't like.

The contradiction was my favourite part of the COVID era. Faith in the government reached a new low. There would have been riots had those who already opposed the government not bent over and taken it. "Bloody Tories locked us up but didn't do it hard or fast enough, and had parties, while some people who also had parties couldn't visit dying relatives. Didn't help anyone, but paid people to stay at home. And ruined the economy but attempted to boost the economy with Eat Out to Help Out"...

But no, that was not the "adversarial narrative”. The thing we couldn't pull the Tories up on was them going on TV every week terrifying us with statistics of how many people died with a virus present in their bloodstream and spent billions trying to jab every living thing in the country. And god forbid you pointed out the inaccuracies in the BBC's reporting.

Marianna Spring was always there to put you straight though: 'Claims that AstraZeneca jab killing people: FALSE (It's actually the Pfizer)'

Edited by R Mutt on Thursday 18th April 19:15

jameswills

3,482 posts

44 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
Marianna Spring and her ilk are a disgusting set of people. A new low in the media space.

RSTurboPaul

10,396 posts

259 months

Thursday 18th April
quotequote all
BigMon said:
Unreal said:
I see where you're coming from but can you see why many people would be just as distrustful of media sources such as the BBC? It's impossible to reasonably deny that the BBC (and other channels) parroted the government line on everything from lockdowns to masks and vaccinations. 'Investigative journalism' went out of the window. Social media companies complied with directions to shadow ban.

So I agree that one should use a wide range of sources but I also think that any source you care to name can be criticised. Sites like zerohedge will often undermine their credibility by hosting all sorts of weird stuff. More traditional sources are clever and they just tell you they can be trusted and they fact check everything. When they're caught out, it's always an innocent error.
Where have I ever said 'trust the BBC'? I never have! I never would unquestioningly trust any media source and just parrot it's findings.

But, at the end of the day, unless you're a genuine vaccine expert undertaking a cold, calculated scientific study in a group of peers which will be peer reviewed how on earth do you know?

What you have to do, as I've said, is look at your sources and using your own judgment is think about how trustworthy they are. I don't doubt the BBC puts it's own spin on things, but I don't think it's a North Korean style unquestioning publisher of government propaganda whereas if we look at someone on TikTok or Youtube who stands to make a lot more money from their content it it goes viral then I, personally, would trust the BBC more in that instance but no one should take any article from anywhere at face value and should try and track down the sources.
Didn't the BBC receive £millions from government for Covid advertising?

I can't find the exact info now but this 2021 article suggests Govt had spent £164m by that point, but I can't find a breakdown of it right now.

https://www.politics.co.uk/comment/2021/03/29/the-...

article said:
In 2020, the UK government tripled its already bloated advertising budget, displacing corporate behemoths such as Unilever, Sky and Proctor & Gamble, by splurging a whopping £164 million. If you then add Public Health England’s substantial 2020 ad spend of £80m, you get a good picture of how government messaging has come to comprehensively dominate our lives.
I am certain it was noted on here (maybe by isaldiri?) that perhaps the BBC were so compliant because they received a massive wedge of funding from Govt and conveniently delayed conversations around getting rid of the licence fee.


EDIT: Does anyone have a subscription to Statista?

https://www.statista.com/statistics/284709/bbc-s-a...

Edited by RSTurboPaul on Thursday 18th April 20:41

andyA700

2,718 posts

38 months

Friday 19th April
quotequote all
Roderick Spode said:
My history teacher at school said - "everyone is biased. Always test your sources, and corroborate where possible with trusted sources..."

This was evident throughout the last four years. TV, online & print media all ceased critical thinking and analysis, and instead started reporting government narrative as facts - "safe and effective, 15 million jabs to freedom, etc" whilst portraying anyone who dared question or applied critical thinking as "far-right alt-loon anti-vaxxer conspiracy nutters." There have been contributors to this suite of threads over the years who have cheerfully labelled any cynical opinion as just this. It stifles debate & shuts down reasoned analysis, meaning there is no longer a rational middle ground where opinions may be explored & amended, rather two polarised extremes throwing accusations at each other. It's entirely pointless.

There will never be a full exploration of vaccine harms by the mainstream media, for the reason that to do so would completely undermine public trust in the very organisations that pushed the narrative in the first place. Obviously government(s) will not wish that to happen either, as public trust (such as it is) would be irreparably damaged.
Really good post.
Back in 2021, I initially thought I had Long Covid symptoms, but then gradually faced a brick wall silence, whilst various consultants made guesses about what I was suffering from. I went from being someone who could walk ten miles easily, to someone who struggled to climb the stairs or walk to the Co-op and back. I used to do bicep curls, three sets of 20 reps of 10kg dumbells in each hand and now I struggle to lift a saucepan to and from the hob.
The doctors are in denial about adverse reactions to the jabs, but they definitely exist. I no longer trust the NHS.
My first jab was AZ batch PV46664 in late February 2021.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/641...

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/641...

https://findothers.com/campaign/families-fighting-...

r3g

3,182 posts

25 months

Saturday 20th April
quotequote all
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.

Boringvolvodriver

8,978 posts

44 months

Saturday 20th April
quotequote all
r3g said:
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.
Mmm - having just watched the “debate” on Excess Deaths in our wonderful HOC - is there any wonder that people start to look at things from a different perspective.

If there is nothing to hide, then show us the figures rather than fudge things rather than only give data to the pharma companies………..

dandarez

13,289 posts

284 months

Sunday 21st April
quotequote all
r3g said:
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.
Chromegrill may well be a 'health professional, fairly senior level' (that could mean anything, assistant Head Porter at the local hospital, to GP at local practice?), who knows?
However, what I'm certain of is he certainly ain't in the English grammar profession...

yikes
Over FIFTY words in one single sentence with NO punctuation whatsoever, not even a measly comma. Phew!


jameswills

3,482 posts

44 months

Sunday 21st April
quotequote all
If they are a “senior health professional” then they have a political and economical incentive to promote the “vaccines” so they are hardly going to say much else.

Elysium

13,835 posts

188 months

Sunday 21st April
quotequote all
dandarez said:
r3g said:
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.
Chromegrill may well be a 'health professional, fairly senior level' (that could mean anything, assistant Head Porter at the local hospital, to GP at local practice?), who knows?
However, what I'm certain of is he certainly ain't in the English grammar profession...

yikes
Over FIFTY words in one single sentence with NO punctuation whatsoever, not even a measly comma. Phew!
I remember Chromegrill.

This is what they really think:

Chromegrill said:
The price I pay (as an adult with a serious underlying health condition) for your freedom to infect me due to your refusal to cover your face is my life. So yes, I could die for your freedom to go round spreading a serious infection when you know you can mitigate that spread through a cheap and simple intervention. But I don't think you realised how true your statement was.

I consider my life too high a price to pay for your freedom to take it away. So many people only look to their own circumstances when thinking about infectious disease, whether it's wearing face masks or for that matter having a vaccination. But infectious diseases don't think like that, they demand that we ask "what can you do for your country" not "what can your country do for you" to quote a famous ex-president of the USA. We all work together to defeat this, or some of us die during a disjointed free for all.
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

The sad truth is that this person may well be a medical professional involved in the COVID response at a senior level. This post shows, beyond any reasonable doubt that their views were emotionally compromised. Driven by fear rather than logic. This cuts through to the very heart of everything that went wrong.

The same 'medical professional' proudly argued that Astrazeneca was safe for young people, which of course we now know is completely untrue:

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

They also argued that COVID was a risk to the young and healthy, which again we now know is completely untrue:

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...





r3g

3,182 posts

25 months

Monday 22nd April
quotequote all
Elysium said:
dandarez said:
r3g said:
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.
Chromegrill may well be a 'health professional, fairly senior level' (that could mean anything, assistant Head Porter at the local hospital, to GP at local practice?), who knows?
However, what I'm certain of is he certainly ain't in the English grammar profession...

yikes
Over FIFTY words in one single sentence with NO punctuation whatsoever, not even a measly comma. Phew!
I remember Chromegrill.

This is what they really think:

Chromegrill said:
The price I pay (as an adult with a serious underlying health condition) for your freedom to infect me due to your refusal to cover your face is my life. So yes, I could die for your freedom to go round spreading a serious infection when you know you can mitigate that spread through a cheap and simple intervention. But I don't think you realised how true your statement was.

I consider my life too high a price to pay for your freedom to take it away. So many people only look to their own circumstances when thinking about infectious disease, whether it's wearing face masks or for that matter having a vaccination. But infectious diseases don't think like that, they demand that we ask "what can you do for your country" not "what can your country do for you" to quote a famous ex-president of the USA. We all work together to defeat this, or some of us die during a disjointed free for all.
https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

The sad truth is that this person may well be a medical professional involved in the COVID response at a senior level. This post shows, beyond any reasonable doubt that their views were emotionally compromised. Driven by fear rather than logic. This cuts through to the very heart of everything that went wrong.

The same 'medical professional' proudly argued that Astrazeneca was safe for young people, which of course we now know is completely untrue:

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

They also argued that COVID was a risk to the young and healthy, which again we now know is completely untrue:

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...




Wow. Quite revealing. Here is some more, from April 2022 in the vax injuries thread:

chromegrill said:
It's pretty clear that if you are a child or young person who wants to minimise your chances of getting myocarditis at the moment, you will want to be vaccinated against COVID, given the high likelihood of getting infected sooner or later and the much worse outcomes and more frequent risk of myocarditis in children after coronavirus infection compared to vaccination. And there's always the nagging question that until we completely understand the mechanism behind vaccine-induced myocarditis, it's quite possible that had the children who developed that not been vaccinated but became infected with COVID, they might well have had COVID-associated myocarditis instead which could have been a whole lot worse for them.

At the end of the day, it's thanks to meticulous monitoring of the vaccines that we are able to detect complications as rare as myocarditis (and it is rare; you could vaccinate all the eligible children in a large UK town or medium sized city without seeing a single case). And whilst vaccine complications that go beyond common things like mild flu symptoms or redness at the site of injection are obviously undesirable and everything possible needs to be done to minimise the likelihood of them happening, it's not as if significant harm is coming to large numbers of young people as a result of vaccinations. More young people would be harmed by COVID itself, and more badly harmed, if we didn't have COVID vaccinations available.
rolleyes

rodericb

6,762 posts

127 months

Monday 22nd April
quotequote all
ha ha yeah very eager to comply with the regime, as "managers" are wont to be. Doctors and medical professionals are usually very eager to follow the regime too, as per Haque et al in 2012.....

r3g

3,182 posts

25 months

Monday 22nd April
quotequote all
ruggedscotty said:
waynecyclist said:
Not sure if to post this here: https://www.thenorthernecho.co.uk/news/19349995.eb...

Also: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9657379/B...

Just shows the stupid level people will go.
hence people should be dna profiled and then chipped... stop this stupidity... if they cant be trusted...
10 June 2021 from here : https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

rolleyes

Rollin

6,091 posts

246 months

Monday 22nd April
quotequote all
Yup, just put the crossbow battalion and the YouTube me harder brigade in charge next time. Did we get pigswills story of his journey to the truth via RFK jnr yet? I've been away.

Pupp

12,228 posts

273 months

Monday 22nd April
quotequote all
dandarez said:
r3g said:
This gem has just landed in t'other thread.

Chromegrill said:
As a health professional involved at a fairly senior level in the COVID response it's been quite illuminating to see how really quite small numbers of people have developed these sorts of conspiracy theories throughout the pandemic and amplified them to make it seem like there is a really serious problem when there isn't.
jester

Not sure whether to post the Comical Ali or the Gunshow 'This is Fine' meme.
Chromegrill may well be a 'health professional, fairly senior level' (that could mean anything, assistant Head Porter at the local hospital, to GP at local practice?), who knows?
However, what I'm certain of is he certainly ain't in the English grammar profession...

yikes
Over FIFTY words in one single sentence with NO punctuation whatsoever, not even a measly comma. Phew!
Isaldiri has an apprentice…