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In fairness, I do blame for my gray beard and aching knees.

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"What do you *want*?"

"I want to live just long enough to learn what actual research is. And when they realize what idiots they've been, I will wave at them ... like this. Can you and your associates arrange that for me, Mr. Morden?"

The rescue of the stranded on the space station was a smooth, well-conducted, low-drama operation. Predictably, it's bringing out a bunch of crap from and . "Chinese-made garbage" etc.

I'm still enough of an idealist to cheer *any* successful human . If turns out to have built a better and longer-lasting space station than the increasingly rickety ISS, or gets humans back to the before the , or is first on ... well, maybe I'd rather see the Stars and Stripes than the Five-Star Red, but mainly I'll just be glad it's happening at all.

Every spacefaring nation has had accidents, some fatal. The test is in how they react. It looks to me like China passed this one with flying colors. That's all that matters.

Seen in the wild: "And then the said, 'Donald is the kindest, bravest, warmest, most wonderful human being I've ever known in my life.'"

causes what we in the biz call " events," among its other nasty effects. attack, , pulmonary , deep vein . All things you should try to avoid.

nature.com/articles/s41467-024

The covid —any of the currently approved vaccines—helps protect against such events. A isn't yet clear: the obvious hypothesis is that it works by reducing the incidence and sincerity of covid, and therefore reduces the effects of the disease. Say it with me now: further research is needed. Send me a pile of cash and I'll be happy to get on that, BTW.

(It also helps protect against , by an entirely different mechanism. I can natter about that if anyone wants.)

But the effect itself is clear. Has been from the start of the vaccine era, really. Now a very large-scale study has confirmed it. There will be more studies, as there should be. They will show the same result. I'd bet my fortune on that, if I had a fortune, because then I'd have an even bigger fortune. Have I mentioned lately that need to eat?

As it is, all I have to pledge is my life and my sacred honor. I take both of those pretty seriously.

Of course this runs directly counter to the narrative. Based on a transitory and maybe illusory increase in clotting risk from an early vaccine that's no longer on the market (Johnson & Johnson) they've built an entire mythology about "the shot." Lately they've added " cancer," which is not a thing that exists, to the canon.

So when dedicated antivaxers see any of the large and ever-growing number of studies showing protective effects against more than the itself, especially against the exact same problems they claim the vaccine causes, they react with mockery and/or rage. It's all they know how to do.

Years of bitter experience have taught me there's no point in trying to reason with them. I still hold out hope that at least some antivax sentiment isn't that dedicated, that a lot of people are scared of getting vaccinated out of the general unease brought on by ignorance.

Oh yeah: the Methods section in the linked article provides details on data collection and analysis. It looks good to me, and I have a whole lot of experience in study design. Note that no vaccine manufacturers provided . For a full list of funding sources, see the Acknowledgements.

I don't suppose I have many if any antivaxers left in my audience. If I do, well, I guess there's a reason you're still here. And if you like me or trust me or respect me at all, please pay attention to my words.

For everyone else, if what I've written here is useful, please do with it what you can.

Middle-aged white people on and the halftime show. One calls him "so famous no one has ever heard of him." I reply, "Don't equate 'no one' with 'no one I know'."

Yes, I am also middle-aged white people. Bast save me from ever being *that kind* of middle-aged white people, okay?

The is probably the only mass in Earth's history that conforms to the popular stereotype, and it's our mental model for such events just because are so charismatic. But yeah. We're in the middle of a sixth great extinction event right now, and the pace makes it frighteningly easy for people to pretend otherwise.

lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v47/n19/lo

I laughed. But more and more people believe this dangerous nonsense. Our ability to prevent and treat is under full-scale attack, and millions—tens or hundreds of millions—will die because of it.

Nobody deserves to die of an easily preventable disease. If anyone did, though, the people pushing this insanity would be at the top of the list.

Checklist time!

Good food:
Good beer: France ❌ Olympus Mons ❌
The Louvre: France ✅ (kind of) Olympus Mons ❌
High peaks: France ✅ Olympus Mons ✅
Highest peak in Solar System: France ❌ Olympus Mons ✅
Cool fossils: France ✅ Olympus Mons ❌ (probably)

Hard decision, really.

That meme going around about how are evolving to lose their rattles because humans keep killing the ones that rattle? It's a just-so story. I get why those are often satisfying, but they're just as often nonsense. And for all its sins, Google is still your friend when it comes to this kind of thing.

rattlesnakesolutions.com/snake

[climbs out of acid bath] You mean I've been doing this wrong the whole time?

"Making fun of isn't the best way to educate them."

"It is very difficult to educate mass murderers as to why mass murder is bad."

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