Now public health and safety is being debated about, just as if its a political belief?

When folks talk about someone winding up with a “profound mental disorder”, the first thing I think is “Of course, they mean *temporary *mental disorder.”

Okay, smart guy. Persuade me.

Give me an example of a usage of the phrase where it clearly doesn’t. :dubious:

On edit:

Uh-oh.

http://www.littlethings.com/woman-didnt-know-she-was-pregnant/

So…the belly ache was unrelated to her being pregnant?

And why am I bothering to follow your links and respond? I think I’d rather have the bucket of monkey shit than waste more of my time on you.

How is this responsive to the request for an example of using “wound up with” to not imply “caused”? I don’t see the phrase in the link.

Well, here’s what it comes down to:

It was related. But did it cause the pregnancy? What was asked was the use of the phrase that didn’t imply causation, right?

“She Called Out Of Work With A Belly Ache And** Wound Up With** The Surprise Of Her Life!”

You don’t see “wound up with”?

Ah, there’s my bucket! Perfect!

Eep eep.

:smack: Nope. I missed it.

I think the phrase “wound up with” implies that the two issues are related, rather than that one caused the other (your own link is an example of this). But it still begs the question of whether Rand Paul believes that vaccines are related to mental disorders.

If he doesn’t think so, then he’s just spouting non-sequiters. “Some babies drink breast milk and wind up committing murder when they grow up”; “I ate a plum and wound up with the flu”; “I saw the movie Titanic and wound up with the shits”. If that is the type of discourse he is offering up in interviews, the man is profoundly disturbed, and not worthy of elected office (or practicing medicine).

Question for you: Do you think that there is some relationship between vaccines and mental disorders?

Yes, there is; many anti-vaxxers appear to have them.

Yes, as BrainGlutton correctly suggests: anti-vaccination activists appear to suffer cognitive defects.

But the anti-vax movement is more associated with the political Left than with the political Right. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and Bill Maher are certainly not right-wing.

More generally, the worst states in the nation for vaccine compliance are also mostly those that lean solidly blue. Oregon, the single worst with over 7% of its kindergarten population “exempted” from vaccinations, was a solid Obama carry. It’s true that #2, Idaho, was a Romney win, but then the list goes solidly blue: Vermont, Michigan, Maine, and Wisconsin.

At the bottom of the list, Mississippi, the supposedly backward redneck gun-toting bigoted ignorant state, permits exemptions only for medically verified reasons and has less than one-tenth of one percent of its kindergarten population unvaccinated. The #49 state is West Virginia, a Romney win as well.

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6341a1.htm

I’m not crazy about that methodology for assessing anti-vax political tendencies.

My working hypothesis is that anti-vax is roughly 60/40 as between hippies and anti-government whackos. Just like fluoride.

According to that hypothesis, we would expect very high numbers in states like Oregon and Maine with large numbers of both kinds of people, and fewer in states like West Virginia that have few hippies but also few libertarians.

I think this whole this is spewing into a more pro-science/anti-science debate in the media. Sprinkle that with the religious or “family” values of hard right wingers and suddenly it’s Obama to blame.

How hard is this? There’s a disease. It can kill your kid. Even if it doesn’t, wherever your kid goes, kiddie puts other kids too young to have the vaccination at the same risks-- disease coming, might kill you.

Then we get dummy McCarthy-- blonde, sexy, rich and HEY! She’s on Fox News! You know, the more conservative news channel who always gets their facts right! Because they’re conservative too! They wouldn’t let her speak her views if she wasn’t right, would they? Of course not! It’s television!

Then the bigger dummies come up with “religious reasons” for not vaccinating. I’d say some of them are full of shit and aren’t religious at all. Those who aren’t kidding with the religion should simply have the kids go straight to foster homes and get vaccinated. I know there’s no test for being a qualified parent, but when you actually have to stop and debate yourself for whatever reason that potentially saving my kid and others from a disease by getting a FREE VACCINE requires thought, you’re more dumb shit than when the dumb-shits first founded dumb-shit town. :rolleyes:

I have heard of many tragic cases of walking, talking politicians making moronic statements out of their asses and winding up with moribund careers. :frowning:

But Michele Bachmann, Dan Burton and Rand Paul certainly are.

Bottom line: Being antivax is the crazy that knows no political/ideologic boundaries. It afflicts both the Left and Right, Democrats and Republicans.

As to overall anti-science stupidity, the Right still holds a solid lead over its adversaries, despite efforts from the Left to catch up using the issue of GMOs.

Hmm. Looks like monkey shit.

Smells like monkey shit.

Definitely in a bucket.

Gonna pass on tasting it, I think, and just treat it as I would monkey shit.

What an amazing coincidence!

For instance:

Glenn Beck compares anti-vaxxers with Galileo.

I have heard of many cases of posters saying to themselves, “Wow, what a completely dishonest and moronic partisan fuckwit” after reading Terr’s posts.