Perfect. My wife got her second dose of the Moderna today. Reactions vary but Rye delivers predictable symptoms.I was careful. It’s good rye.
Wonderful things when properly distilled and aged. But don’t take my word for it, do your own research and for that I highly recommend Woodford Reserve.Sorry for my ignorance, what does Rye do?
Kurt
I/we got our 2nd dose of Moderna yesterday late afternoon. I felt a bit of a headache about 5 hours later, took a couple of Tylenol and went to bed, slept perfectly and feel fine now. Wife is still asleep so don’t know about her yet this morning
Funny how the flu went away while all those deaths occurred and people who fell off ladders died of covid. If you rely on the Government for your facts you may be disappointed in the end (Gulf of Tonkin, weapons of mass destruction, Building 7). Just sayin. I'd go Ivermectin myself. I note you did not answer any of the questions.In the USA more than 29,000,000 people had covid. More than 500,000 died. 153,000,000 million vaccine doses given with no deaths due to the vaccine. From what I noticed nobody undid the deaths from covid. If everyone gets the vaccine as soon as it is available we can be done with this early summer. We will also most likely need yearly boosters until this burns itself out. Just like every other disease we have had to deal with. Here is a site to get informed. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/safety/adverse-events.html
DENNY
You should do your own research and form your opinion as you go. I would recommend not using one source, especially if it ends in .gov. Start by looking at the clinical trials for Ivermectin (not conducted in this country) and then ask yourself why was this drug not offered to those 500,000 people. That may explain the answer to question #1.You apparently have all the facts please post them for us.
DENNY
Funny how the flu went away while all those deaths occurred and people who fell off ladders died of covid.
Funny how that worked for the flu, Covid, not that much. Funny also why no one seems to want to answer the 3 questions. Some appear to get defensive. I was just askin.Some flu seasons are inherently mild, but likely the reason that flu deaths were down significantly this year is because masks, social distancing, and working remotely actually work to reduce the spread of viruses.
Funny how that worked for the flu, Covid, not that much. Funny also why no one seems to want to answer the 3 questions. Some appear to get defensive. I was just askin.
Some flu seasons are inherently mild, but likely the reason that flu deaths were down significantly this year is because masks, social distancing, and working remotely actually work to reduce the spread of viruses.
I'm a public school teacher, and it goes without saying that public schools are disease factories (said in a bit of jest - but they are a perfect place for spreading viruses). Guess what? When we taught remotely this year, my wife (also a teacher), kids and I had absolutely no sicknesses for the entire year - not even a sniffle, and that is FAR from normal. Why? Because we kept our distance from others. We worked from home. And we wore masks when we went out. Of course this isn't sustainable in perpetuity and I'm happy to be back in the classroom in person, but pointing to a lower flu death toll as though that is somehow evidence of the CDC manipulating the numbers is misleading. Flu deaths are down because of the action taken to limit the spread of Covid-19. And that, to me, is a pretty good thing.
Some flu seasons are inherently mild, but likely the reason that flu deaths were down significantly this year is because masks, social distancing, and working remotely actually work to reduce the spread of viruses......