That kind of mnemonic has it's place, but I've found it's best to sound professional and level when trying to convey information someone doesn't want to hear.
The typical idiot won't do anything regardless, the few with half a brain cell will sometimes ask for more information.
My boss was asking me to get the vaccine, I said no, I wasn't gonna do it. I there had been no longitudinal studies and it seemed rushed and potentially dangerous.
He asked where I was getting my information from, I think he assumed I was getting it from Facebook or TikTok. I send him a link to VAERS and a few old primary sources, mostly studies, along with listing of all the fucked shit JnJ, Pfizer, and AstraZenica have done in the past couple decades. I told him I was skeptical of mRNA therapies, he told me to get the JnJ.
"The people who knew their baby powder was full of carcinogenic asbestos and kept selling it anyway? I trust them with a rushed injection?"
He got kinda pissed but had no retort
What could he say? He's pissed, but he knows there's information out there that contradicts what the television told him.
It may do nothing, but I bet it's eating a hole in the back of his mind.
The most insidious part is the success the media has had in framing people who are simply skeptical about an unproven mRNA therapy.
If you don't want the shot for any reason, you're a Q Follower nut job who believes you're being made magnetic. The media has gotten really good at subversively discrediting opinions.
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