Discrimination is not bad in and of itself. When we hire the best candidate for a job we're discriminating against the less qualified. When we purchase product A instead of product B we're discriminating against the more expensive product.
I wish they'd discriminate against people who come to work sick. States should allow employers to charge an employee who comes to work sick any illness pay the company has to pay other workers who become sick because of that.
In the case of immunizations that actually work and have a proven track record there's no legitimate issue I can see to excluding people from group situations who are unwilling to remove themselves from the vector pool. Everyone has the freedom to make their personal choices, but that doesn't mean they're free to force me into accepting the consequences of their choices. It's like saying you have the right to decide to fire your gun into the air and it's my responsibility to protect myself from falling bullets if I'm worried about them.
So your argument is that every single person should get the vaccine so that everyone else doesn't have to? That makes no sense.
Hoppes doesn't mention the fact that all vaccines were introduced AFTER their respective illness was already on the decline. Jew science for the jew vaccine, so you're forced into jew medicine your whole life.
That's your argument, invented out of thin air.
(post is archived)