This is in response to some chudges ruling against it in the 69th court of peepeepoopoo

Get your shots folks

Edit:

there’s a sequel

:seen-this-one: lol

  • Mother [any]
    hexagon
    ·
    3 years ago

    The conservative culture of science (and to some extent public health) is great when it comes to abstract theory change, but right now it’s getting people killed.

    Seems like more a US problem than a science problem, Israel and EU approved boosters months ago. Not saying you are wrong, it definitely plays into it, but what we have is a leadership deficit imo

    • Philosoraptor [he/him, comrade/them]
      ·
      3 years ago

      It's absolutely both of those. The natural culture of science is pretty slow and pretty conservative: we want to look before we leap, and be sure about consequences before we make big changes. Most of the time, that culture has (arguably) at least some positives, especially if the alternative is Facebook-style "move fast and break stuff." Sometimes, though, we need to expedite that process and it's worth taking some risks in order to prevent more damage. Competent political (and scientific, really) leadership should pressure scientific institutions to behave extraordinarily in extraordinary circumstances.