On Thu, 03 Jan 2013 09:43:00 -0800, Robert H wrote:
> On Jan 3, 12:33 pm, MarkA <nob...@nowhere.invalid> wrote:
>> On Thu, 03 Jan 2013 08:03:29 -0800, Robert H wrote:
>> > On Jan 3, 12:40 am, J <
jdyou...@ymail.com> wrote:
>> >> On Wed, 2 Jan 2013 20:57:15 -0600, "W.T.S." <
m...@earthlink.net>
>> >> wrote:
>>
>> >> >In article <9c12754e-b59b-4e6b-93ac-8ddf50310795
>> >> >@
f8g2000yqa.googlegroups.com>,
craz...@comcast.net says...
>>
>> >> >> Is this going to far? Just because a person refuses to get a flu
>> >> >> shot, he or she loses their job at a hospital in Indiana?
>> >> >No, the hospital did the right thing to protect the patients from
>> >> >the flu virus.
>>
>> >> >> Hospital administration claims this is to protect the patients.
>> >> >> But think about something, they are ordering that their workers
>> >> >> be injected with a flu vaccine, and these people don't want that
>> >> >> injection. It's their bodies.
>> >> >Then they should find another job that doesn't endanger people.
>>
>> >> >> Personally I think the Hospital is over stepping it's boundaries
>> >> >> now. I understand flu vaccine, I don't get it myself. I have
>> >> >> never received it since I left the Air Force. I believe our bodies
>> >> >> have the capability to develop its own immune system, plus I eat
>> >> >> right and I get plenty of vitamins. And I have not been sick in
>> >> >> years. When I do, I take a common sense approach, eat a lot of
>> >> >> oranges and get plenty of fluids.
>> >> >You are a total idiot. A lucky idiot, but an idiot still.
>>
>> >> >> But never mind that, back to the important issue. A person has a
>> >> >> right to what goes inside his or her body, right?
>> >> >Nope, not and be around patients as well as people with weakened
>> >> >immune systems. The vaccine prevents the spreading of the flu, end
>> >> >of story.
>>
>> >> >> This isn't much different than the abortion issue, when the
>> >> >> argument is a woman has a right to control her own body. Well,
>> >> >> don't all of us have that right..even when it includes what goes
>> >> >> into our bodies?
>> >> >No. The issues are not related.
>> >> >How would you like a surgeon who wouldn't wash his hands?
>>
>> >> >>
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2013/01/01/indiana-hospital-fires-8-wor...
>> >> wrong. Some people may fear an adverse re-action; however
>> >> unreasonable that may seem to you. Besides, since when did you start
>> >> caring about hospital patients? You're usually the first one
>> >> screaming to kill the sick and infirm.
>>
>> > For some, getting the flu shot is good. My own doctor even told me,
>> > our bodies have the capability to develop it's own immunity and as
>> > long as a person is healthy, it's not necessarily a good thing.
>>
>> > Mandatory inoculation?
>> > Hmm, does anyone see a big picture?
>>
>> > Does it protect the patient? Not necessarily. So that's a bunch of
>> > nonsense.
>>
>> Fallacy. Just because flu shots are not 100% effective, it doesn't
>> follow that they have no value whatsoever. As said before, hospital
>> workers have an obligation to avoid infecting their patients. Flu
>> shots are one way of achieving that goal.
>
> You are failing to see a big picture.
>
>
>>
>>
>> > Forcing inoculation, what's next? What else is going to be forced.
>> > Join a union if you want to keep your job? Oh wait, yea they do that
>> > already in many states.
>>
>> With good reasons.
>
> Ah, so we can start forcing people to do things, as long as we have "good"
> reasons.
Now, you're getting it. Part of living in a society means that you give
up some personal liberty for the benefit of the group. If the concept is
difficult for you, you might want to watch a documentary on how wolves and
bees survive. If you don't like that arrangement, you can become an
outcast, and live by yourself in an isolated area.
>
>
>
>>
>>
>> > It's amazing when you listen to the liberals and their double talk.
>>
>> > A liberal will tell you a persons sex life is private, that's it is no
>> > ones business what two consenting adults do behind closed doors.
>>
>> > But yet, they seem to be able to tell us what we have to drive, what
>> > we have to eat, what we have to do in order to keep a job.
>>
>> You seem to have trouble distinguishing an activity that threatens the
>> health and well being of others versus one that does not. Ironically,
>> conservatives want to remove restrictions on activities that DO impact
>> others, like removing controls on pollution, etc, and regulate
>> activities that don't impact others, like allowing gays to marry each
>> other.
>
>
> No, I see very clearly what you support.
>
>
>>
>>
>> > They tell you that abortion is an issue between a woman and her body.
>> > It's her body, no one has any right to tell her what to do with her
>> > body.
>>
>> > But yet, now many agree it's ok to force inoculations.
>>
>> > Wow...no one sees the big picture.
>>
>> Not true. Nobody is being forced to be inoculated.
>
> Bull, you're requiring something be inoculated into their bodies as a
> condition of employment.
One of the privileges of an employer is placing reasonable requirements on
your employees as a condition of their employment. For a health care
worker, being immunized against a common, easily transmitted, potentially
fatal virus is a reasonable requirement. If the employee doesn't want to
be immunized, he can look for an employer who does not place that
restriction on him.
From some of your comments, I suspect that you are a conservative. It is
doubly ironic that the conservatives in the USA are all about not having
the government interfere with business, and opposing worker's rights.
However, this employer exercising his rights seems to be rubbing you the
wrong way. Funny, that.
> Now, they don't this foreign object placed in their bodies, so you want
> to take away their means of survival.
>
>
> You are only required
>> to be inoculated if you want to keep your job, working around patients
>> who might likely die if they contract the flu. The choice is entirely
>> up to the worker.
>
> Right, cause we know these inoculations is going to prevent the spread
> of a viral infection.
Exactly. You're not as dumb as you let on.
>
>
>
>> Is that "big picture" enough for you?
>
> I see a much bigger picture than you do. One in which we live in a
> society where we can force people to have a foreign object injected into
> their bodies, so they can have the means to survive.
>
You could also view it as a society where the vast majority are protected
from the folly of a minority of idiots. I suppose that, being one of the
idiots, it looks different to you. Oh, well.