You two are not fit to lick the boots of RAF Reg ... I was a clk then Int O, so give me some slack fellas
So, coronavirus...
- Wyndham Upalot
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PlanetGlyndwr wrote: ↑Wed Dec 23, 2020 7:18 pm to be quite frank i'm missing bimbo's thinly veiled stories of shagging the pritster
Wyndham Upalot wrote: ↑Wed Dec 23, 2020 7:32 pmYou two are not fit to lick the boots of RAF Reg ... I was a clk then Int O, so give me some slack fellas
You are right, my back is killing meWyndham Upalot wrote: ↑Wed Dec 23, 2020 7:32 pmYou two are not fit to lick the boots of RAF Reg ... I was a clk then Int O, so give me some slack fellas
- Wyndham Upalot
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Losers: Army - pah! Paras = dumb RM. Infantry = Dumber RAF Regt !
Wyndham Upalot wrote: ↑Wed Dec 23, 2020 11:03 pm Losers: Army - pah! Paras = dumb RM. Infantry = Dumber RAF Regt !
So I’ve read a little bit of research about ORF8, one of the protein groups on the Coronavirus. There’s some suggestion that where there’s a depletion of the orf8 coding, the virus is less likely to cause serious illness. The new variant in the UK has ORF8 variations. I suppose we’ll find out about this in the next month or so.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
- tabascoboy
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- Hal Jordan
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In this case, he could mean both.
Take the actual cost of the jab out of their pensions. £1500 should get them back to the surgery
From WSBTV in Atlanta:
ATLANTA -
Researchers in Georgia say there’s growing evidence that a decades-old vaccine children take to ward off measles, mumps and rubella may also provide protection from getting COVID-19 or reduce the severity of the disease.
“The act of taking this vaccine may provide you with enough enhanced ability to mount a respiratory response to the agent coming in, so mitigates the disease,” said University of Georgia molecular biologist David Hurley.
[SPECIAL SECTION: Coronavirus Pandemic in Georgia]
Hurley and principal investigator Jeff Gold say they recruited 80 people for their study on the MMR vaccine. Those with high levels of vaccine anti-bodies appeared nearly immune to the coronavirus from family members who tested positive for the virus.
“They were living with a husband or wife who had an active disease, but for whatever reason, they never tested positive themselves or contracted any symptoms,” said Gold.
ATLANTA -
Researchers in Georgia say there’s growing evidence that a decades-old vaccine children take to ward off measles, mumps and rubella may also provide protection from getting COVID-19 or reduce the severity of the disease.
“The act of taking this vaccine may provide you with enough enhanced ability to mount a respiratory response to the agent coming in, so mitigates the disease,” said University of Georgia molecular biologist David Hurley.
[SPECIAL SECTION: Coronavirus Pandemic in Georgia]
Hurley and principal investigator Jeff Gold say they recruited 80 people for their study on the MMR vaccine. Those with high levels of vaccine anti-bodies appeared nearly immune to the coronavirus from family members who tested positive for the virus.
“They were living with a husband or wife who had an active disease, but for whatever reason, they never tested positive themselves or contracted any symptoms,” said Gold.
It's all a conspiracy to make everyone take the autism MMR vaccineFangle wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 3:38 pm From WSBTV in Atlanta:
ATLANTA -
Researchers in Georgia say there’s growing evidence that a decades-old vaccine children take to ward off measles, mumps and rubella may also provide protection from getting COVID-19 or reduce the severity of the disease.
“The act of taking this vaccine may provide you with enough enhanced ability to mount a respiratory response to the agent coming in, so mitigates the disease,” said University of Georgia molecular biologist David Hurley.
[SPECIAL SECTION: Coronavirus Pandemic in Georgia]
Hurley and principal investigator Jeff Gold say they recruited 80 people for their study on the MMR vaccine. Those with high levels of vaccine anti-bodies appeared nearly immune to the coronavirus from family members who tested positive for the virus.
“They were living with a husband or wife who had an active disease, but for whatever reason, they never tested positive themselves or contracted any symptoms,” said Gold.
- Insane_Homer
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“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
Are they the ones that don’t buy unripe bananas any more?
It would be quite the irony if this proves to be true. The vaccine that really kicked up the modern day antivaxxer movement giving protection against the pandemic coronavirus. Presumably it'd mean there must be some kind of similarity in a surface protein somewhere?Saint wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 4:54 pmIt's all a conspiracy to make everyone take the autism MMR vaccineFangle wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 3:38 pm From WSBTV in Atlanta:
ATLANTA -
Researchers in Georgia say there’s growing evidence that a decades-old vaccine children take to ward off measles, mumps and rubella may also provide protection from getting COVID-19 or reduce the severity of the disease.
“The act of taking this vaccine may provide you with enough enhanced ability to mount a respiratory response to the agent coming in, so mitigates the disease,” said University of Georgia molecular biologist David Hurley.
[SPECIAL SECTION: Coronavirus Pandemic in Georgia]
Hurley and principal investigator Jeff Gold say they recruited 80 people for their study on the MMR vaccine. Those with high levels of vaccine anti-bodies appeared nearly immune to the coronavirus from family members who tested positive for the virus.
“They were living with a husband or wife who had an active disease, but for whatever reason, they never tested positive themselves or contracted any symptoms,” said Gold.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
I would guess so, but that's really where we do enter the unknown.Biffer wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 6:31 pmIt would be quite the irony if this proves to be true. The vaccine that really kicked up the modern day antivaxxer movement giving protection against the pandemic coronavirus. Presumably it'd mean there must be some kind of similarity in a surface protein somewhere?Saint wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 4:54 pmIt's all a conspiracy to make everyone take the autism MMR vaccineFangle wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 3:38 pm From WSBTV in Atlanta:
ATLANTA -
Researchers in Georgia say there’s growing evidence that a decades-old vaccine children take to ward off measles, mumps and rubella may also provide protection from getting COVID-19 or reduce the severity of the disease.
“The act of taking this vaccine may provide you with enough enhanced ability to mount a respiratory response to the agent coming in, so mitigates the disease,” said University of Georgia molecular biologist David Hurley.
[SPECIAL SECTION: Coronavirus Pandemic in Georgia]
Hurley and principal investigator Jeff Gold say they recruited 80 people for their study on the MMR vaccine. Those with high levels of vaccine anti-bodies appeared nearly immune to the coronavirus from family members who tested positive for the virus.
“They were living with a husband or wife who had an active disease, but for whatever reason, they never tested positive themselves or contracted any symptoms,” said Gold.
One of the real troubles of vaccine development is that it's only the last 10 years or so where we've actually had an understanding as to why things work, as opposed to the previous trial and faik to discover what works. But because the public face of vaccines has been relatively successful there's an idea that we've really known what we were doing for years.
Historically that seems to be how viruses mutate, to be successful they have to keep the host alive to allow spreading of the virus. Canny bastardsBiffer wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 4:18 am So I’ve read a little bit of research about ORF8, one of the protein groups on the Coronavirus. There’s some suggestion that where there’s a depletion of the orf8 coding, the virus is less likely to cause serious illness. The new variant in the UK has ORF8 variations. I suppose we’ll find out about this in the next month or so.
what does that even mean??