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#1 2022-07-17 06:56:20

Loohan
Administrator
Registered: 2014-10-31
Posts: 34,686

BBC documentary Unvaccinated

A BBC team spent a week trying to convince seven anti-vaxxers to get the Covid jab - amid their claims 'it contains deadly microchips' and is a 'plot to depopulate the Earth': So did ANY of them change their mind?
    Groundbreaking BBC documentary Unvaccinated is to be aired on Wednesday
    Seven anti-vax Britons spend five days living together in a house – where they are bombarded with myth-busting scientific evidence about the vaccine
    At end of week, they are taken to a vaccine clinic and offered a jab there and then
    Among them is Vicky, 43, who is convinced the jab is causing deaths and serious injuries that are underplayed by health officials
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/arti … d-jab.html

It can't be trusted. It might damage fertility – or unborn children. It's been 'rushed through' and we're all 'human guinea-pigs'. Oh, and it's 'a plot to depopulate the Earth'. Sound familiar? All are baseless, yet well-worn claims made about the Covid vaccine.

But can those who hold such ill-informed – and in some instances extreme – opinions ever change their mind? A groundbreaking BBC documentary to be aired on Wednesday sets out to discover just that.
(snip)

When we meet Nazarin, 21, a waitress from London, she reveals that, like Vicky, she's concerned about 'deaths and injuries' caused by the vaccine, and doesn't trust data showing that the jabs are safe. She says: 'The most common adverse reactions are heart attacks, blood clots and seizures.'

More than 140 million doses of the Covid-19 vaccine have now been administered in the UK, and the Government has received fewer than 500 reports of severe complications. Yet Nazarin has decided to dedicate her spare time to protesting to 'inform people about what is going on'.
(snip)

Later Luca, 31 {31}, reveals his outlandish views – thanks to conspiracy theories he's read about on Facebook, Twitter and TikTok.

'I think the vaccine was put on this world to depopulate the world population.' How? Luca has suspicions that there are deadly microchips in the jab – a belief shared by five per cent of unvaccinated adults, according to data cited in the show.

Luca, who has been banned from Twitter several times for breaching misinformation rules, also says he has read online about people who 'have the vaccine and then three {3} weeks later, they drop down dead'. His concerns are rooted in a general sense of mistrust of the Government and medical establishment. 'What are the pharmaceutical companies making out of this? They make a lot of money.'
(snip)

To address the participants' concerns, the experiment uses a science-backed strategy to combat vaccine hesitancy. Prof Fry cites University of Cambridge research that suggests that if you want to convince someone to get vaccinated, you can't just talk up the positives and ignore downsides. 'It's about being honest about the bad stuff as well as the good stuff,' she says.
(snip)

Next, Prof Fry empties another bag of jelly beans, this time containing thousands of sweets. 'Imagine I told you to pick out the one foul jelly bean out of 33,000 {33!},' she says. This represents the tiny risk of developing myocarditis – inflammation of the heart, the most common of all the severe side effects after the vaccine. Prof Fry adds that the risk of other, serious side effects, such as heart attacks and blot clots, is far lower.

It's a clever way of illustrating risk, but it's too much for some of the anti-vaxxers.

All RCs devoid of spike vibe in article.

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