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View Full Version : UK the 5Million refusing the Covid Vaccine must be forced to have it


arista
24-11-2021, 10:11 AM
Great Live Debate was on Ch5HD AM live

He had the Doctor on a Screen
who has said this.


In Italy those refusing the Free Jab
will have to pay for it.


1463447196255326212

Alf
24-11-2021, 10:15 AM
:laugh:

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:18 AM
They should just offer cash incentive. A huge chunk of that 5 million would probably just say "**** it" and get it done for a new bathroom.

Liam-
24-11-2021, 10:19 AM
You can’t force people to do something they don’t want to do, if people choose not too take the vaccine, they’re idiots, but that’s their right, they just shouldn’t be allowed to have the benefits that people who have been vaccinated are allowed, you make a choice, you face the consequences

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:19 AM
On the thread topic I am 100% still against mandatory vaccines, for the record. Flat no to mandatory medical procedures. It is the step too far. And 95% uptake should be MORE than enough.

arista
24-11-2021, 10:21 AM
They should just offer cash incentive. A huge chunk of that 5 million would probably just say "**** it" and get it done for a new bathroom.



Yes that worked in the USA,
in some states

Alf
24-11-2021, 10:24 AM
They should just offer cash incentive. A huge chunk of that 5 million would probably just say "**** it" and get it done for a new bathroom.If I was unvaccinated, which I may or may not be, I would happily stay at home for the rest of my life for a living wage.

arista
24-11-2021, 10:25 AM
If I was unvaccinated, which I may or may not be, I would happily stay at home for the rest of my life for a living wage.



I think you are

Alf
24-11-2021, 10:27 AM
I think you areThat's fine, you're entitled to think.

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:32 AM
You can’t force people to do something they don’t want to do, if people choose not too take the vaccine, they’re idiots, but that’s their right, they just shouldn’t be allowed to have the benefits that people who have been vaccinated are allowed, you make a choice, you face the consequences

Speaking of "benefits", I think if the UK does enforce it, this will be how they end up doing it. There won't be jackboots kicking in doors and pinning people down to stick a needle in their arm... ... ... they'll just put pressure on employers to make vaccine passports mandatory in the workplace, and also make Covid vaccination a requirement for receiving Universal Credit benefits. They can do that quite easily; if vaccines are mandatory in workplaces then refusing vaccination without medical reasons can be deemed a barrier to seeking work, and the benefits can then be "sanctioned" down to next to nothing.

People who can't work, and can't get benefits, are probably going to find themselves backed into a corner enough to get vaccinated.

Final hold-outs will be people who are self employed who can't be caught in either of those traps. But :shrug: if they start making it mandatory for businesses people to require tradespeople etc. show their vaccination status before entering... and encourage households to do the same...

Note again, I'm actually against all of the above, I think this is basically the same as it being mandatory, and a step too far. Education and encouragement should be the way to do it (and again, 95% uptake should be more than enough).

My exception to this is healthcare - I do think vaccination should be mandatory to work in healthcare. People have the right to refuse vaccination... they don't have the right to put vulnerable patients at risk. They have NEVER had that right; all sorts of documentation is required to work with vulnerable people and always has been, long before Covid. My wife had to get her immunities checked and vaccinations updated before she worked in addictions services, for example (Hep B double vaccine, measles booster). People are acting like this is a "new" condition of employment. It isn't!

thesheriff443
24-11-2021, 10:33 AM
On the thread topic I am 100% still against mandatory vaccines, for the record. Flat no to mandatory medical procedures. It is the step too far. And 95% uptake should be MORE than enough.

I don’t think people should be forced to have it I also don’t agree with people being given money to have it.

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:34 AM
If I was unvaccinated, which I may or may not be, I would happily stay at home for the rest of my life for a living wage.

I'm vaccinated and I get to do that anyway for way more than living wage :smug:.

(In all seriousness cabin fever is actually really bad and I can't wait to be able to get back into the office more regularly... staying at home all the time gets old :bawling: )

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:34 AM
I also don’t agree with people being given money to have it.

Why not?

thesheriff443
24-11-2021, 10:35 AM
I'm vaccinated and I get to do that anyway for way more than living wage :smug:.

(In all seriousness cabin fever is actually really bad and I can't wait to be able to get back into the office more regularly... staying at home all the time gets old :bawling: )

We have noticed

Beso
24-11-2021, 10:36 AM
This would mean forcing jehova witnesses to have the vaccine....good luck with that mama britain.

Liam-
24-11-2021, 10:37 AM
Speaking of "benefits", I think if the UK does enforce it, this will be how they end up doing it. There won't be jackboots kicking in doors and pinning people down to stick a needle in their arm... ... ... they'll just put pressure on employers to make vaccine passports mandatory in the workplace, and also make Covid vaccination a requirement for receiving Universal Credit benefits. They can do that quite easily; if vaccines are mandatory in workplaces then refusing vaccination without medical reasons can be deemed a barrier to seeking work, and the benefits can then be "sanctioned" down to next to nothing.

People who can't work, and can't get benefits, are probably going to find themselves backed into a corner enough to get vaccinated.

Final hold-outs will be people who are self employed who can't be caught in either of those traps. But :shrug: if they start making it mandatory for businesses people to require tradespeople etc. show their vaccination status before entering... and encourage households to do the same...

Note again, I'm actually against all of the above, I think this is basically the same as it being mandatory, and a step too far. Education and encouragement should be the way to do it (and again, 95% uptake should be more than enough).

My exception to this is healthcare - I do think vaccination should be mandatory to work in healthcare. People have the right to refuse vaccination... they don't have the right to put vulnerable patients at risk. They have NEVER had that right; all sorts of documentation is required to work with vulnerable people and always has been, long before Covid. My wife had to get her immunities checked and vaccinations updated before she worked in addictions services, for example (Hep B double vaccine, measles booster). People are acting like this is a "new" condition of employment. It isn't!

I just meant not being allowed to go to concerts, shows and any private businesses that require people to have their passports, those benefits, not pushing the unvaccinated into forced poverty :joker:

thesheriff443
24-11-2021, 10:38 AM
Why not?

Rewarding people that are ignorant
Even if they get the jab they are protecting themselves not you or me, we have done that by getting the jabs

Liam-
24-11-2021, 10:38 AM
Yeah, financially rewarding the ignorant doesn’t seem like the best can of worms to open

arista
24-11-2021, 10:44 AM
['Why all adults in the UK should
be made to have Covid jabs': As Austria makes vaccines mandatory,
a GP who has worked through the pandemic
and seen its shattering effect argues the case

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-10231609/As-Austria-makes-vaccines-mandatory-GP-worked-pandemic-argues-case.html


Dr David Lloyd is a GP
who supports mandatory vaccination,
at least for adults — arguing that there
should be a fine for those
who refuse to comply
Yes, it is controversial, but I am a GP who
supports mandatory vaccination,
at least for adults — and what's more,
there should be a fine for those who refuse to comply.

As someone who has been on the frontline
of this thing (and who is in the unusual
position of splitting my work between
Covid patients and non-Covid patients),
I strongly believe that the time has
come for the UK to take a stronger line,
as European countries are doing.

Frankly, we have no other choice,
because asking people to be vaccinated
is simply not working and the anti-vaxxers
are threatening our recovery.

And it's time to do it now.]

user104658
24-11-2021, 10:57 AM
Rewarding people that are ignorant
Even if they get the jab they are protecting themselves not you or me, we have done that by getting the jabs

Yeah, financially rewarding the ignorant doesn’t seem like the best can of worms to open

To be fair, yes, I didn't think this through - if there was a similar vaccination drive in future, people who would have been perfectly happy to get vaccinated would probably "hold out" until incentives were offered :joker:.

bots
24-11-2021, 11:05 AM
being vaccinated doesn't stop a person catching covid or spreading it, so what exactly is the problem with remaining unvaccinated if that is your choice?


The media as usual have a lot to answer for, stirring up fear of the "unclean" when you can just as easy get covid from a vaccinated person

Also, this drive to get the world vaccinated is complete bollox too. The reason given is to stop new variants mutating, but the simple fact is, we can't ever stop it mutating, and the more it mutates, the more likely it will become a harmless virus.

We are being fed lies and fear, and the majority are just swallowing it hook line and sinker.

Vaccination is a personal choice

Liam-
24-11-2021, 11:28 AM
It is a choice, but just like every other choices we make, this one comes with consequences, if you know that only vaccinated people are allowed into certain places or allowed to do certain things, choosing to remain unvaccinated means you purposefully choose to not be a part of those things

user104658
24-11-2021, 11:30 AM
being vaccinated doesn't stop a person catching covid or spreading it, so what exactly is the problem with remaining unvaccinated if that is your choice?


The media as usual have a lot to answer for, stirring up fear of the "unclean" when you can just as easy get covid from a vaccinated person

Also, this drive to get the world vaccinated is complete bollox too. The reason given is to stop new variants mutating, but the simple fact is, we can't ever stop it mutating, and the more it mutates, the more likely it will become a harmless virus.

We are being fed lies and fear, and the majority are just swallowing it hook line and sinker.

Vaccination is a personal choice

We still have the issue of the drain on healthcare resources, for example, you need ventilators to carry out ANY procedure under general anaesthetic, from an emergency surgery after a car accident to a schedules hip replacement and having them taken up by Covid cases in ICU continues to create an absolutely insane backlog. That part is not scaremongering - it's at catastrophic levels at this point. What's the solution? To say "OK don't get a vaccine but that means you don't get a ventilator if you get severely ill"? (Thankfully) the healthcare service doesn't work like that either and people have a right to treatment even if it's caused by their own bad decisions.

Vaccination also does dramatically reduce the likelihood of catching and spreading Covid - I don't know where the myth that it makes no difference comes from. You still CAN catch and CAN spread Covid whilst vaccinated, but it's less likely (that you will catch it, and also milder cases spread less easily).

However on that front - like I said 95% uptake should be more than enough, 100% uptake is a very unrealistic target for any vaccine, e.g. measles was all but eradicated (from being extremely common) with far less than 95% vaccine uptake. And measles is extremely contagious.

bots
24-11-2021, 11:33 AM
We still have the issue of the drain on healthcare resources, for example, you need ventilators to carry out ANY procedure under general anaesthetic, from an emergency surgery after a car accident to a schedules hip replacement and having them taken up by Covid cases in ICU continues to create an absolutely insane backlog. That part is not scaremongering - it's at catastrophic levels at this point. What's the solution? To say "OK don't get a vaccine but that means you don't get a ventilator if you get severely ill"? (Thankfully) the healthcare service doesn't work like that either and people have a right to treatment even if it's caused by their own bad decisions.

Vaccination also does dramatically reduce the likelihood of catching and spreading Covid - I don't know where the myth that it makes no difference comes from. You still CAN catch and CAN spread Covid whilst vaccinated, but it's less likely (that you will catch it, and also milder cases spread less easily).

However on that front - like I said 95% uptake should be more than enough, 100% uptake is a very unrealistic target for any vaccine, e.g. measles was all but eradicated (from being extremely common) with far less than 95% vaccine uptake. And measles is extremely contagious.

it's not the drain on resources it was in 2020. The economy is back on the right track. By next year, i would be surprised if its any more of a drain than flu on resources

Child vaccination is something that really irks me. A child is not going to be affected by covid unless they have other serious issues, but they are vaccinating kids to reduce school disruption, and i think that is way over the ethical line

user104658
24-11-2021, 11:40 AM
it's not the drain on resources it was in 2020. The economy is back on the right track. By next year, i would be surprised if its any more of a drain than flu on resources

Child vaccination is something that really irks me. A child is not going to be affected by covid unless they have other serious issues, but they are vaccinating kids to reduce school disruption, and i think that is way over the ethical line

It's not AS much of a drain but it is still a drain; when there are surges there are still a lot of people who have been due planned surgeries and had them already delayed for months, having them rescheduled again because of ventilators being taken up by Covid cases in ICU.

Of course the MORE sensible way to get around that issue would be for the government to invest more into properly stocking and equipping the NHS, but they're still on a mission to underfund it so that it seems unfit for purpose to justify creeping privatisation. But that's a whole other issue!

Niamh.
24-11-2021, 11:56 AM
Definitely wouldn't be for forcing people to have it, absolutely not, as much as I'm pro vaccine and have had mine

Denver
24-11-2021, 11:58 AM
People should get the choose but they should know there are consequences such as losing jobs involving vulnerable patients, you get a choice but not a free ride

rusticgal
24-11-2021, 12:19 PM
being vaccinated doesn't stop a person catching covid or spreading it, so what exactly is the problem with remaining unvaccinated if that is your choice?





No it doesnt stop you getting it or spreading it...but it does seem to reduce the risk dramatically of dying from it or being hospitalised. My Dad has just breezed through covid and he is 91...both my husband and I with underlying conditions got through it with relative ease.
Personally I dont care what people do so long as I feel protected...the majority of people that are being hospitalised and dying are those that have decided not to be vaccinated....thats the difference.

bots
24-11-2021, 12:27 PM
No it doesnt stop you getting it or spreading it...but it does seem to reduce the risk dramatically of dying from it or being hospitalised. My Dad has just breezed through covid and he is 91...both my husband and I with underlying conditions got through it with relative ease.
Personally I dont care what people do so long as I feel protected...the majority of people that are being hospitalised and dying are those that have decided not to be vaccinated....thats the difference.

yeah, i've had my booster so i'm all for the vaccination, the point is that given you can still catch covid from someone who is vaccinated it makes no difference to a vaccinated person whether someone else is vaccinated or not. I think its wrong to vilify people for making a personal choice in a free democracy

user104658
24-11-2021, 12:27 PM
I keep seeing conflicting figures on the number of vaccinated/unvaccinated patients hospitalised with Covid. Lots of misinformation and hard to dig through. Some state that up to 1/3 are actually vaccinated, others that the vast majority are unvaccinated, and none of the data is segmented into demographics (e.g. by age or with underlying conditions). Harder than ever to get a clear picture.

bots
24-11-2021, 12:30 PM
I keep seeing conflicting figures on the number of vaccinated/unvaccinated patients hospitalised with Covid. Lots of misinformation and hard to dig through. Some state that up to 1/3 are actually vaccinated, others that the vast majority are unvaccinated, and none of the data is segmented into demographics (e.g. by age or with underlying conditions). Harder than ever to get a clear picture.

i think that is intentional. We keep being fed fluffy figures to match the relevant agenda of the moment.

To me it's obvious that we are being played, that still doesnt stop me being a supporter of vaccination, but i see whats going on, and that makes me very uncomfortable

arista
24-11-2021, 12:32 PM
I keep seeing conflicting figures on the number of vaccinated/unvaccinated patients hospitalised with Covid. Lots of misinformation and hard to dig through. Some state that up to 1/3 are actually vaccinated, others that the vast majority are unvaccinated, and none of the data is segmented into demographics (e.g. by age or with underlying conditions). Harder than ever to get a clear picture.


TS Please Stop trying to muddle this up
this GP Dr. David Lloyd
is Bang On Right
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-10231609/As-Austria-makes-vaccines-mandatory-GP-worked-pandemic-argues-case.html

user104658
24-11-2021, 12:38 PM
Actually I think I was just over-simplifying the mats on this - it is true that it's about 2/3 of hospital patients who are unvaccinated (so 1/3 are vaccinated) but when you then factor in that most of the adult population, and a VERY high percentage of the elderly population, is vaccinated that statistic becomes much more dramatic when illustrating how effective they are. I could do the proportionate maths but I can't be bothered :joker:.

The basics are that in fact a HUGE majority of hospital cases of Covid in the under-75's are unvaccinated, and given that the unvaccinated make up only 10 - 15% of the population, that's even more significant.

Get your jabs folks :laugh:.

Cherie
24-11-2021, 12:39 PM
I keep seeing conflicting figures on the number of vaccinated/unvaccinated patients hospitalised with Covid. Lots of misinformation and hard to dig through. Some state that up to 1/3 are actually vaccinated, others that the vast majority are unvaccinated, and none of the data is segmented into demographics (e.g. by age or with underlying conditions). Harder than ever to get a clear picture.

Given the protection even after booster is 94%, that still leaves 6% of vaccinated people who may end up in hospital, so you would expect some vaccinated to be in hospital

user104658
24-11-2021, 12:53 PM
Given the protection even after booster is 94%, that still leaves 6% of vaccinated people who may end up in hospital, so you would expect some vaccinated to be in hospital

I still thinks it helps to have it broken down by demographic, e.g. what proportion of that 6% is very elderly or has underlying vascular or respiratory problems. Is the proportion the same as with the unvaccinated, etc. 94% is the "whole population" figure but it could actually be even higher than that in the "general population" if a large proportion of that 6% has other health problems.

Cherie
24-11-2021, 01:01 PM
No it doesnt stop you getting it or spreading it...but it does seem to reduce the risk dramatically of dying from it or being hospitalised. My Dad has just breezed through covid and he is 91...both my husband and I with underlying conditions got through it with relative ease.
Personally I dont care what people do so long as I feel protected...the majority of people that are being hospitalised and dying are those that have decided not to be vaccinated....thats the difference.

Great to hear Rusti, :love:you must have been worried

Cherie
24-11-2021, 01:02 PM
I still thinks it helps to have it broken down by demographic, e.g. what proportion of that 6% is very elderly or has underlying vascular or respiratory problems. Is the proportion the same as with the unvaccinated, etc. 94% is the "whole population" figure but it could actually be even higher than that in the "general population" if a large proportion of that 6% has other health problems.

oh for sure they could drill down the figures alot more and give the public some context, for example the numbers in hospital with covid will include people who went in for something else but tested positive while there ...mothers in labour for instance

bots
24-11-2021, 01:17 PM
the more broken down the data is, the less wriggle room they have to promote their agenda. The other angle is that the more broken down the data is, the more it is likely it encroaches on patient confidentiality.

It's difficult

arista
24-11-2021, 01:41 PM
1463461423820988427

Dr. Lloyd on the screen

Tom4784
24-11-2021, 03:10 PM
Deleted Post

Niamh.
24-11-2021, 03:32 PM
Nobody should be forced to have the vaccine. Instead, we should make it so that unvaccinated people without medical exceptions simply don't have the same access to events and such. Don't want to get vaccinated because you're dumb enough to believe bull**** on Facebook? Get used to not going to pubs, cinemas or any kind of events where you can spread your pro-disease germs around.

That's how it is here atm, you need a covid cert to eat indoors, drink indoors and for cinemas/concerts etc

Mystic Mock
24-11-2021, 04:19 PM
I personally don't support forcing it on people.

But obviously I recommend people to try and get the Pfizer Vaccine.

arista
24-11-2021, 04:20 PM
That's how it is here atm, you need a covid cert to eat indoors, drink indoors and for cinemas/concerts etc


Thats fair
The SkyNewsHD reporter there
said today it is spreading more, again.

thesheriff443
24-11-2021, 04:41 PM
Just booked my booster for the 3/12/21 and my daughters for the 18/12/21

Alf
24-11-2021, 05:39 PM
Nobody should be forced to have the vaccine. Instead, we should make it so that unvaccinated people without medical exceptions simply don't have the same access to events and such. Don't want to get vaccinated because you're dumb enough to believe bull**** on Facebook? Get used to not going to pubs, cinemas or any kind of events where you can spread your pro-disease germs around."We're not forcing you, we're just gonna take away everything you need until you consent"

arista
24-11-2021, 05:43 PM
"We're not forcing you, we're just gonna take away everything you need until you consent"


You can buy food

Alf
24-11-2021, 05:59 PM
You can buy foodThank you, you're so kind.

Glenn.
24-11-2021, 09:16 PM
"We're not forcing you, we're just gonna take away everything you need until you consent"

Play stupid games, win stupid prizes

Vanessa
24-11-2021, 09:18 PM
You can't force people to have the vaccine.

Crimson Dynamo
24-11-2021, 09:30 PM
You can't force people to have the vaccine.

i think we kind of have too

we think nothing (in Scotland) of raising alcohol unit prices

fag prices

making certain drugs illegal

etc

Tom4784
24-11-2021, 09:33 PM
Deleted Post