0.89% - hospitalization rate if you get covid with no vaccine
0.01% - hospitalization rate if you get covid with the vaccine
50% - what democrat fanatics believe is your odds of needing hospitalization if you get covid
Maher went on to slam Democrats over a poll that showed "41%" of them believed unvaccinated people have "over 50%" risk of hospitalization when it's actually "0.89%," adding that it's "0.01%" for vaccinated people.
And some of these hospitalizations are for people who are unfortunately already dying of something else already:
But Maher pushed back on the lack of "consensus" on how many people have actually died from COVID, pointing to the recent passing of former Secretary of State Colin Powell, who Maher pointed out had cancer and Parkinson's disease but died of "complications from COVID."
What's the hospitalization rate driving to work without a seat-belt?
I bet it's higher.
seatbelt laws are also gay
I'd prefer keeping them on the books.
Regulations written in human blood are typically good ones. Same with maximum occupancy levels for buildings.
Then I assume you also support vaccine mandates. If anything vaccine mandates are MORE legitimate than seatbelt laws because at least vaccine requirements are purported to decrease the risk you impose on other people.
Not really comparable, mostly because occupancy laws are applied to buildings used for "public accommodation" and the seatbelt laws are impositions on individuals.
Maybe a lawyer can chime in to give definitions because I can't be arsed to look this up.
you gonna attack food safety laws next?
OK I will. The USDA, the FDA, and the CDC are all unconstitutional agencies, need to be disbanded, and all of their regulations need to be voided.
Regulation of the quality of consumer products isn't a legitimate function of the federal government. It is a power that is reserved for the states as per the 10th amendment. If the states want to regulate products sold within their borders in a way that aligns with their individual constitutions there is no reason that they can't.
Some of the functions of the USDA and CDC could potentially be folded into the Department of War as they pertain to national security.
Given the FDA's track record with identifying foods that are safe for long-term consumption, the Department of Agriculture's tendencies to turn a blind eye towards large agri-corps violating the law and best practices, and my general mistrust of government, yes.