All right, calm down! You have convinced me.Cuz antivaxxers never play off the emotions of parents, nope nope!
Maybe they simply feel for the plight of the poor, little germs:They hate ME now, for vaccinating my kids!!!
All right, calm down! You have convinced me.
Maybe they simply feel for the plight of the poor, little germs:
http://photos-a.ak.fbcdn.net/hphoto..._117739044732_530824732_2097662_3628918_n.jpg
Don't let their cute, little faces fool you, though! These can be some nasty critters, when they actually get into you!
I agree with all of that but you are giving way too much credit to the target audience. What I am trying to point out is that we end up on a slippery slope by using celebrities to endorse vaccines; we are appealing to the lowest common denominator. As such, we get into a mess by promulgating celebrities as experts and since it is for the sake of the lowest common denominator, how can they distinguish between the right and wrong celebrities? Do you see what I mean?Good question.
Thing is, you can fact check both "endorsements" and find one is quoting statistics backed up with evidence and find that the audio she is using is not faked.
The other one totally embellishes the statistics (saying things like 1/10 instead of the more accepted 1/100 - 1/150). She uses doctors that sell questionable quack cures to push her "it must have been vaccines" agenda, and then goes on and on about toxins when she gets the most toxic substance known to man injected into her face while ignoring how she finds this toxin beneficial in a DOSE less than what is actually harmful. It's completely hypocritical to call ethyl mercury TOXIC in the doses found in vaccines, which also isn't the METHYL mercury that poisons people in actual high doses found in nature (not vaccines).
So, why aren't any of these ladies on Ograh or Larry King? Reality and facts too hard to sensationalize? Saving lives too boring?
I've even been told that I was brainwashed by getting a college education!
Eyeron said:But for some unknown reason people tend to listen to celebrities more than people who do actually know and have umpteen million years of experience in their fields. Damned scientists and doctors. What do they know.
I agree with all of that but you are giving way too much credit to the target audience. What I am trying to point out is that we end up on a slippery slope by using celebrities to endorse vaccines; we are appealing to the lowest common denominator. As such, we get into a mess by promulgating celebrities as experts and since it is for the sake of the lowest common denominator, how can they distinguish between the right and wrong celebrities? Do you see what I mean?
I really think that health agencies are going about this the wrong way and need to go on the offensive more. A good start would be to use actual experts to convey the idea that people should listen to actual experts and not some ditzy celebrity or smarmy TV doctor.