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[–]weavilsatemyface 3 insightful - 2 fun3 insightful - 1 fun4 insightful - 2 fun -  (1 child)

The paper, if anyone in interested in the actual science:

Thanks for the link, but that's quote-unquote "Science™", not actual science.

People aren't dying of heart attacks while being vaccinated. They're dedicated pro-vaccine supporters dying months later.

If it is stress killing them, how come they weren't dying during the really stressful part of the pandemic? The media was full of stories exaggerating the risk of dying of Covid, we had lockdowns and social distancing and masks, every day the news was full of death counts and stories of how Covid can cause strokes and heart attacks and it can attack your kidneys and liver and brain, and social media was full of fake videos from China showing people dropping dead in the street from Covid. 2020 was about a thousand times more scary and stressful than anything anti-vaxxers can say, and people weren't dying then.

[–]ActuallyNot 2 insightful - 1 fun2 insightful - 0 fun3 insightful - 1 fun -  (0 children)

Thanks for the link, but that's quote-unquote "Science™", not actual science.

What's the definition of those terms?

People aren't dying of heart attacks while being vaccinated. They're dedicated pro-vaccine supporters dying months later.

Got scientific link for that?

If it is stress killing them, how come they weren't dying during the really stressful part of the pandemic?

Okay good question.

When you have a good question like that it's important to ensure that you've got data, you're applying correct statistics, and, which is critical, your assumptions are correct.

We should do the last one first, because getting that wrong will mean that you misinterpret your entire analysis.

1) What's your evidence that part of the pandemic was really stressful in terms of vasoconstriction?
2) What's your evidence that they weren't dying due to that?