bendog
Diamond Member
With the vaccines, there literally is no way they can alter DNA, unless something is really misunderstood. The mRNA should never comes into the cell nucleus. And the mRNA degrades over a few weeks. But I can see why a doc would tell a young healthy person that they can view the vaccine as optional if they have some concerns at least until the vaccines are fully approved. But I know young people who have spent 6 mos getting well from covid even when they didn't have to be hospitalized, and 3 mos seems like a "good outcome."Totally agree with your post.
I used Thalidomide as an example of horrible side-effects to a medication, and what could happen if the FDA didn't review and approve medications properly.
Some folks are saying that vaccines, even if approved by the FDA, could still be dangerous.
I disagree with that opinion based on about 350m doses of vaccines being administered already, with very limited ill effects.
I'm a pro-vaxer,and an anti-masker.
But there's no way a university should be open without mask and vaccine mandates.