Sciencemag tries to disprove the connection between influenza vaccines and greatly increased chance of miscarriage with kvetching over supposed methodology flaws, confirmation bias and full blown ad hominems.
Hate to say it, but I agree with this kike's analysis. The result that is making headlines fell out of the study by accident, as a consequence of post-hoc testing. It isn't possible to draw a firm conclusion here because the statistical analysis isn't robust enough. The study could (and should) serve as a basis for future research to investigate a possible link. But to draw firm conclusions from this study is premature.
Nicholas King
I'll second that.
Sounds worthless.
Oliver Moore
You will find that everywhere there exists vaccine denial, there exists a vaccine advocate. They find you.
Josiah Murphy
It's literally true.
Connor Baker
There isn't possible to do proper statistical analysis on something as diffuse as this at all. What we have is just a huge body of anecdotal evidence from white people who subjectively experience their own and their children's health deteriorate in a way they feel is connected to the vaccines.
Jacob Russell
Literally paid teams of shills to head off any criticism of vaccines and to advocate for involuntary injections online
Grayson Wright
Don't underestimate the power of the bluepill either, user. Not saying there isn't shilling about it, but the topic is one of those things where the bluepill mind really balks. I know a lot of normalfags who are pretty open minded who will also veer off into frothing religious fervor when muh vaccines are touched. I guess it's just too scary for them to contemplate something like the medical field having been kiked (like every other field.)