
Prize is...a cake from SA XD
The Eleventh Doctor wrote:Never ignore coincidence. Unless you are busy. Then always ignore the coincidence.
This is like sticking your head in the sand, to be honest. At the very least, this attitude shows willingness to proclaim a stance without trying to educate yourself on this issue. I obviously don't expect people to educate themselves on stuff they were never interested in or stuff that have no value to them, but if you're bothering to make such a categorization, at the very least I think you owe it to yourself to not mislead yourself like that.Hime-Chan wrote: About the anti-vaccination movement: considering that the only people I've heard talking about it are Americans, I categorize that as an American problem.
I thought cheddar was yellow, but then again I have have only seen a pumpkin that was not orange once, so something probably happens before it gets to market. It did not taste like mozzarella either.Hime-Chan wrote:This is our main problem when I say "genetically modified" things: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsanto
I'm not saying that all of it is bad, I'm just wary of it! Maybe it's just because the EU and especially France haven't been positive about it
If the USA, and now most other countries, didn't have a problem with added sugar and other weird stuff in food, then obesity wouldn't be such a problem. I was lucky enough, that even if my parents weren't working desk jobs, cooked most of our meals, and taught me how to cook. Food is a lot more important than the latest clothes and phones and whatever. I don't know why everyone thinks that vegetables are expensive, they aren't, especially if you buy them frozen or in cans!
I am also not saying that France is better than rest of the world, it's laughably not. I facepalm so much at my country that I actually left it. And while you mentionned the "spotlight" of the USA, that's the main problem, it feels like everything your country do is bigger and better, while it sure isn't. There's been so much meddling, and trying to teach the rest of the world lessons while they let their own population have basically no healthcare and poor education (and tv-shows aren't helping, that hero complex makes us want to gag).
Which is sad because there's a lot of scientific research going on in the US (and probably other stuff that I'm not aware of), it's just all tarnished by the rest.
About the anti-vaccination movement: considering that the only people I've heard talking about it are Americans, I categorize that as an American problem.
Brycec: I'd go with either gruyère/cheddar or mozzarella
The stats for the US really aren't great, "according to recent findings from PhRMA's Second Annual National Health Survey, 1 in 4 Americans believe vaccines can cause autism in young children, including 30 percent of adults who are responsible for raising a child. This troubling belief was also more prevalent among younger Americans of child-bearing age 18-34 (30 percent) and those without a college degree (30 percent)." To give some sort of comparison, in my classes at school I don't know a single person who's refused a vaccination which unfortunately is anecdotal evidence, meh.Kor wrote:This is like sticking your head in the sand, to be honest. At the very least, this attitude shows willingness to proclaim a stance without trying to educate yourself on this issue. I obviously don't expect people to educate themselves on stuff they were never interested in or stuff that have no value to them, but if you're bothering to make such a categorization, at the very least I think you owe it to yourself to not mislead yourself like that.Hime-Chan wrote: About the anti-vaccination movement: considering that the only people I've heard talking about it are Americans, I categorize that as an American problem.
I mean, a simple 5 minutes worth of google research would show you that this problem is much more than just an American problem. One of the most infamous papers regarding (and supporting) anti vaccinations originated in the UK. Heck, I also saw once an article in Israel about parents who refuse to vaccinate their kids.
Terry Pratchett wrote: The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
bash7353 wrote:I kind of always assumed that Haneda's parents might've had names.
The Eleventh Doctor wrote:Never ignore coincidence. Unless you are busy. Then always ignore the coincidence.
The Doctor wrote:There's no point in being grown up if you can't be childish sometimes.
The Doctor wrote:Remember: Hate is always foolish, and love is always wise.
To summarize the issue as succinctly as possible: It is important for everyone to be vaccinated. The vaccines will not work on everyone to begin with, and some will be ineligible to be vaccinated. To combat this, we have another resort that's even more effective: herd immunity. By vaccinating the rest of us, we can protect ourselves and double our defenses. This has been proven to be extremely effective over the past several decades, but it is now faltering due entirely to the anti-vaccination movement.In 2003 in northern Nigeria—a country which at that time was considered provisionally polio free—a fatwa was issued declaring that the polio vaccine was a conspiracy by the United States and the United Nations against the Muslim faith, saying also that the drops were designed to sterilize the true believers. Subsequently, polio reappeared in Nigeria and spread from there to several other countries. Health workers administering polio vaccine have been targeted and killed by gunmen on motorcycles in Kano.
To me, though, that sounds a lot more like the product of a needless inferiority complex from the "other side". There are plenty of good things about France without resorting to that kind of rhetoric. If we went on stereotypes and generalizations, all France would be known for to the outside world would be being filled with an aimless and lazy population who spend all of their time striking to get out of work and also always surrenders--which is completely unfair and not something I or anyone mindful of the rest of the world would believe. However, that is what you get with generalizations, and it's the exact same for those regarding not just America but anywhere else.Hime-Chan wrote:it feels like everything your country do is bigger and better, while it sure isn't. There's been so much meddling, and trying to teach the rest of the world lessons while they let their own population have basically no healthcare and poor education (and tv-shows aren't helping, that hero complex makes us want to gag). Which is sad because there's a lot of scientific research going on in the US (and probably other stuff that I'm not aware of), it's just all tarnished by the rest.
To the campus of my new studying place.Yuri Iwamoto wrote:where did you move moonie?
The Eleventh Doctor wrote:Never ignore coincidence. Unless you are busy. Then always ignore the coincidence.
Uhmm.. there are lot's of factors affecting soil fertility, and I think it's pretty obvious that continued use of its nutrients will cause the decline in its fertility, hence the use of fertilizer, organic or chemical. If you do some googling, you'll see in graphs that there is a trend of increase in fertilizer consumption over the years. Obviously, the demand for food rises as population increases, and with limited agricultural areas (and some are converted to residential or industrial use), land use will intensify to yield more crops. There is also the problem of decreasing arable land per population throughout the years. If you wanna go technical, try read "Soil Fertility Decline in the Tropics" by Alfred Hartmink and http://www.fao.org/ag/magazine/0306sp1.htmStopwatch wrote: EDITEDIT: ...wait, what? Do you have a source for the claim about our soil not being as fertile as in the past? There may be issues with farming which have driven us to use different tactics (pesticides, for one >_<), but I don't think I've ever heard that as a reason before.
Eh, I wasn't saying that vaccination isn't important, I'm just saying that I've never heard people publicly claiming that vaccination caused autism or whatever by anyone in the last 10 years. Most of the children's vaccines are either compulsory or reimbursed. Every person I know is vaccinated.Jd- wrote:@Hime-Chan: There are a lot of issues that need to be addressed in that post--not simply from the perspective of proving someone wrong, but from addressing the same misinformation that is exactly the reason this problem continues to persist indefinitely.
I can tell from the expected citation of Monsanto that you are very unfamiliar with what genetically-engineered crops actually are. Being fearful of consuming GMOs due to Monsanto is exactly like being afraid of driving a car because of General Motors. This is because of a simple fact: All GMOs are not the same nor were they ever expected to be. It is a very broad concept and by no means one that can be written off in such a way.
Let's get on with the anti-vaccination movement. It all began when British "doctor" Andrew Wakefield published a "study" (in the interests of profiting from it directly) in once-respected British medical journal The Lancet postulating that the MMR vaccine causes autism. This affected immunization rates in many, many countries around the world--the U.S., the UK, Ireland, much of Europe, Asia. This is because fear-mongering and misinformation spreads quickly. This is doubly so when it concerns the lives of children, as all parents want what's best for their children and they do not want to risk them "contracting" autism as a result of being given a vaccine at their directive. As it turns out, Wakefield's financially-motivated "study" was completely wrong but not before the damage had been done. His legacy is now that of being complicit in the endangerment of human civilization as a whole. I suspect you'll feel a little angry when you see a child with whooping cough and know their suffering is almost definitely the product of one man's greed and shortsightedness.
This issue is extremely important, even beyond just the hysterics in Europe and the Americas:To summarize the issue as succinctly as possible: It is important for everyone to be vaccinated. The vaccines will not work on everyone to begin with, and some will be ineligible to be vaccinated. To combat this, we have another resort that's even more effective: herd immunity. By vaccinating the rest of us, we can protect ourselves and double our defenses. This has been proven to be extremely effective over the past several decades, but it is now faltering due entirely to the anti-vaccination movement.In 2003 in northern Nigeria—a country which at that time was considered provisionally polio free—a fatwa was issued declaring that the polio vaccine was a conspiracy by the United States and the United Nations against the Muslim faith, saying also that the drops were designed to sterilize the true believers. Subsequently, polio reappeared in Nigeria and spread from there to several other countries. Health workers administering polio vaccine have been targeted and killed by gunmen on motorcycles in Kano.
If we assume that Wakefield is right and that vaccines do cause autism (they don't), it would still be worth it to continue vaccinating. The video below sums up everything you need to know in a minute and a half:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RfdZTZQvuCo
My point wasn't, and is still not to say that France is better than the USA, my point is that both aren't better than the other.To me, though, that sounds a lot more like the product of a needless inferiority complex from the "other side". There are plenty of good things about France without resorting to that kind of rhetoric. If we went on stereotypes and generalizations, all France would be known for to the outside world would be being filled with an aimless and lazy population who spend all of their time striking to get out of work and also always surrenders--which is completely unfair and not something I or anyone mindful of the rest of the world would believe. However, that is what you get with generalizations, and it's the exact same for those regarding not just America but anywhere else.Hime-Chan wrote:it feels like everything your country do is bigger and better, while it sure isn't. There's been so much meddling, and trying to teach the rest of the world lessons while they let their own population have basically no healthcare and poor education (and tv-shows aren't helping, that hero complex makes us want to gag). Which is sad because there's a lot of scientific research going on in the US (and probably other stuff that I'm not aware of), it's just all tarnished by the rest.
Falling into the trap I described earlier of projecting your misgivings of your own country onto another is really something that should be avoided. It ultimately causes you to defend the wrong things and ignore the right ones.