Consequence vs Risk

17 July 2021

The very act of getting into your car and attempting to drive safely across town is to reconcile yourself to killing innocent strangers.

This illustrates the danger of confusing consequences with risks.
To amplify further, the consequence of being hit by a meteor the size of a refrigerator is total obliteration. The risk isn’t worth worrying about.

update 210815: With my vigorous immune system and with my regularly encountering various coronae, influenzae, and other viri to keep it well practiced (regulated), would the risks introduced by strange, generationally untested potions be greater than any of their alleged protections?
In my case, yes, so “vaccination” is contra-indicated.

update 210825: You can obsess over the (possible) consequences, or you can evaluate the (probable) risks.

28 August 2021 – On “Following the Science™”

Israeli researchers (at the Kahn Sagol Maccabi Research Centre and Tel Aviv University, 25 August 2021) disclose that “natural immunity” is thirteen times more effective at preventing (re)infection than is “vaccination,” and twenty-seven times more effective at mitigating the symptoms of those (re)infected.  Apparently, when encountering a novel protein, our “antibodies” will adjust their own chemistry to fight it off, and even remember it for months or years after.  For some of us, our “immune systems” may over-react to certain otherwise innocuous proteins, and we will present with “allergies” — to pollen, to peanuts, to beestings, or to dander. 

Elsewhen and elsewhere, a study of over 7000 blood samples from the American Red Cross found evidence of Wuhan Flu™ antibodies in over a hundred specimens taken as early as 13 December 2019. Meanwhile, my work schedule finds me at The Vectory™ (aka The QuikkStopp-by-the-Interstate™) located conveniently just an hour from The Big Airport.  This puts me less than twenty-four hours away from just about anywhere on Earth.  I took sick on the 24th of December and did not recover until the Tenth Day of Christmas.  At the time I thought it was just my biennial flu coming back to recharge my immune system.  It hung on for a little longer than average, but otherwise I had no reason to suspect it was anything other than another influenza or corona or rhino virus.  I had the typical respiratory and inflammatory symptoms – headache, congestion, body ache, low grade fever and nausea, and compromised senses of taste and smell.  All fairly typical (even if uncommon) for me, and I didn’t think much of it other than its being its usual drag.

Getting better, as I usually do, and continuing to work regularly, I felt fine for the next almost nine months until I was finally canned for my stubborn masklessness.  Somehow, I had managed to survive nine months of plague without dipping myself daily in Purell® or muzzling up and cowering every time a strange customer (masked or not) walked into the shop

210828, correspondent JPalmost died from a DT vaccine in 1989. Left me seriously ill for over a year. After that I was allergic to things I had never been allergic to –peanuts, strawberries — and I could not be outside for any length of time, [or I’d] get sick from allergies. Took almost 3 years for those problems to go away, never have tried peanuts again though.JP‘s vaccination experience may be an extraordinary and unusual case, but it is still illustrative of the dangers of unnecessarily compromising our immune systems. Sometimes the risk is worth it, and sometimes not. Proceed with caution and, above all in matters medical, your mileage may vary.

9 September 2021 —  Inverting the Burden
Many theists, statists, maskerati, and other committed faddists embrace a common logical fallacy. 
Often, during rhetorical exchanges, I am challenged to:
“Prove that there’s no god.”   
“Prove that anarchy is utopian.”  
“Prove that Wuhan Flu is not dangerous.”  
“Prove that masks don’t work.”

Of course I cannot, nor would I bother to attempt such a silly exercise.  In logical discourse, the burden of proof is always on the affirmative proposition.  While the prospect of “no god” may strike many believers as a positively ridiculous notion, it is still a claim of a negative condition, just as are “no state” or “no danger” or “no mask.” I’ve yet to hear an affirmative argument that convinces me that fresh air, anti-viral ultraviolet radiation, proper nutrition, good rest, and happy thoughts are more dangerous to my health than bacteria-laden moist facial diapers restricting my airway and compromising social intercourse.

15 August 2022
I’m still selling cigarettes to fat people at the QuikkStopp who are wearing their obedience masks.
Because they’re concerned about their health.
Fat people.
Buying cigarettes.
Wearing masks. On their chins.
For their health.