So, is the prednisone that you give to your dog any different than the prednisone that your doctor prescribes you? No
What about antibiotics? Are they the same?
It’s pretty much the same stuff; in different form. One you can go buy. One you have to get a prescription for.
But, to your point about the EUA, do you not think you should know more about adverse reactions? Did you get either shot? If so, when you got it did they tell you that you could still get it or did you believe that you’d be immune? You thought you’d be immune. They didn’t tell you that you were just as likely to get infected as anyone else. Now ulyoure part of the experiment.
Time will tell what, if anything, it does to you and others.
qaz123 wrote: “So, is the prednisone that you give to your dog any different than the prednisone that your doctor prescribes you? No”
There is a difference in the ivermectin sold as a horse dewormer and the prescription ivermectin.
qaz123 wrote: “But, to your point about the EUA, do you not think you should know more about adverse reactions? Did you get either shot? If so, when you got it did they tell you that you could still get it or did you believe that you’d be immune? You thought you’d be immune. They didn’t tell you that you were just as likely to get infected as anyone else. Now ulyoure part of the experiment.”
Yes, I’ve taken both shots. All drugs have a risk of adverse reactions. The risk of an adverse reaction to the vaccine was much lower than the risk of COVID. There isn’t a vaccine that is 100% effective so quit dragging that strawman across the road. And, no, my chances of infection are much lower than someone who hasn’t been vaccinated, another anti-vaxxer falsehood.