It's crazy to think that by todays standards Mrs. Thatcher would be called a commie socialist leftist nutjob. I miss the good old days when adults ran the show.
@@oliversherman2414 In your own words, how would you describe the true benefits that you received from having had the covid vaccines that those who had none missed out on/went without?
@@safeeffective385 Well, my sister really struggled with covid throughout the pandemic and still lives with the affects of long covid to this day. So, I was glad to be double jabbed
@@oliversherman2414 What you're going to have to do is show some proof here that the well over 70,000,000 of us that had no covid jabs are any worse off than those of you that chose to participate .
I’ve heard from countless individuals that regret getting the covid jabs, who stopped getting more. And I've talked to hundreds that have had zero, and not even one regrets their decision. In fact, the vast majority agree that not participating in this is one of the best decisions that we’ve ever made in our lives. ☝ All that I need to know, right there ☝
Wearing a mask actually is a lot like „keeping a fart in your trousers“. In the sense that it may annoy you a little, but you do it altruistically, so that others don’t have to find out how you smell inside if you know’I‘m saying.
Yeah I don’t think it’s the job of the press to tell you what a key is made of, regardless of what you might use that information for. It’s clear that you should use a magnet to find out whether something is magnetic. Or just see if it is covered in metal like spoons, as Russell pointed out.
Video: shows clip of confused woman who clearly doesn't know what you apparently know about keys. You: "the press missed the point what keys are made out of" WTF how did you leap from her confusion to realising that the press doesn't teach us every single little useless life lesson?
Guffaw guffaw! So hilarious. Must be the thousandth time I've heard that joke. 😂 PS, me and almost everyone I know has had all the vaccines, no injuries, no deaths. Funny that.
@@lashinka2574 What you're going to have to do is show some proof here that the well over 70,000,000 of us that had no covid jabs are any worse off than those of you that chose to participate . Until then, quite literally all of your talking points are rendered completely debunked and moot. Hope that helps!
Yes, Russell, know who else has expressed 'reservations' about these injections (whilst facing federal mandates)? NASA JPL scientists. "We can do the math" they said, in their open letter opposing mandates. So er...........
Yeah, I see that logic. Producing and knowing how satellites work is clearly the same as knowing medicine. Yeah, totally makes sense. Why don't you just ask a mathematician, if it's just about knowing math?
I thought you guys don't like government institutions (JBL is a federal lab), without generalising too much. Unless it supports your conclusion I guess. Ah, why do i bother, that's actually very human, it's called confirmation bias. But please still ask yourself that question. It's always good tonne critical, including of yourself and your own opinions and thoughts. I try to be that as well. That's even advice I have from a TED-talk by a brain surgeon, to reference an actual expert. Will provide a link (to the TED-talk), as it was good overal as well.
Corrections: to be critical of yourself, not "tonne". I meant brain scientist, not surgeon. But he actually says he is a psychiatrist, although I still consider that an expert on the topic.
He doesn't need to respond to that. He is 1) a comedian. 2) you can't just reference "science" as a source. That is not a source. What science? What study? Who defined "the science"? Called the burden of proof (fallacy if you want him to prove you wrong, when you didn't even bother to prove your own point). Now to make a less relevant point: where did you get all the money to read studies blocked by a paywall? As far as I know, Sci-Hub doesn't work anymore, as it is illegal and I think there was a court case against it from Elsevier, in India.
Here's my science...I am fine,and not dead,almost was too scared of the needles,but I braved through,and now...I still ain't dead,I don't feel mind controlled,and despite being around alot of covid I didn't get sick. Pfizer CEO said creepy stuff sure...but if the vaccine had issues,I would have told you.
Please explain all the unusual deaths of fit young athletes which is happening world wide since the vaccination programme started. Each to their own beliefs but please don't make fun of those who believe different to you.
Well, the difficulty in answering this concern is - as you say - who do you believe? To take this example, it would appear that this particular claim was checked by several authorities including fifa and the who, and found that they were either pre existing conditions or deaths that pre dated the pandemic itself! (The links are on Google if you need a source). So this appears to be a non concern relating to the vaccine. But Obviously my difficulty here is that if you don't trust fifa or Google or the who or any source that I could give you... then what else is there for me to say? I'd love to be able to reassure you but as you rightly point out; It comes down to what you personally believe. So instead I would ask that you consider what is your responsibility to your community. If the vaccine is dangerous then the sheer amount of people affected negatively worldwide would surely have been catastrophic by now. It isn't. So... do you act to protect yourself and those around you from the disease that is killing people? Or do you stay away from a vaccine that - if it was harmful - is taking its sweet time to be so? I wish you the best in your decision
@@tarrisvaal Of course the vaccine is 100% effective and safe. Except most of the Covid cases now have been vaccinated and Phizer have been forced to admit to 1223 deaths related to their vaccine IN THE FIRST THREE MONTHS. And at its worst, the virus had a 99% recovery rate and average age of mortality of 82.5, higher than the national average according to the ONS, the government's own statistics. Almost all young people were asymptomatic and at very little risk.
@@simonrunswick5730 I believe the vaccine was actually rated at 70-90% effective depending on variant and source. It was never said to be complete protection, which is why even people who are vaccinated can still get the virus (albeit that they do tend to suffer far milder symptoms). Its a vaccine. Not a cure. As for the number of people still coming down with it despite vaccination, that sadly is a numbers game. If the vaccine is 99% effective (for example) and 100 people are exposed to the virus, that's still 1 person coming down with it. If deaths from the virus were say 1% then in theory it's 1 in 10000 people who would succumb. But when we are talking populations in the millions that number rises exponentially and that's assuming everyone was vaccinated. Without that shield it gets far worse. I can understand some people dislike the idea of vaccines (they always have since they were invented in the 1700s) but at the end of the day even a low efficacy vaccine will help to some degree and the more people have it the harder it is for the virus to keep its hold on a population
@@lashinka2574 The densely-populated heart of Africa with >1B people also had little to no covid jabs, has had very low rates of covid sickness/death, and “long covid”. So does that make them “right wingers” as well?
@@lashinka2574 In your own words, how would you describe the true benefits that you received from having had the covid vaccines that those who had none missed out on/went without?
Perhaps instead of living in complete fear of COVID-19, it would be better to encourage healthier lifestyles and work to improve the slow pandemic of chronic lifestyle diseases exacerbated by COVID-19?
@@godamid4889 Lifestyle diseases can be defined as diseases linked with one’s lifestyle. These diseases are non-communicable diseases. They are caused by lack of physical activity, unhealthy eating, alcohol, substance use disorders and smoking tobacco, which can lead to heart disease, stroke, obesity, type II diabetes and lung cancer. The diseases that appear to increase in frequency as countries become more industrialized and people live longer include Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, atherosclerosis, asthma, cancer, chronic liver disease or cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, chronic kidney failure, osteoporosis, PCOD, stroke, depression, obesity and vascular dementia.
@@JK_JK_JK also, for context, I watched someone close to me die alone, over zoom, because of COVID. Your bland indifference to the suffering of people affected by COVID is galling and inexcusable.
@@godamid4889 It's amazing that the fearmongers here are so brainwashed that they are triggered just by encouraging a healthy lifestyle to be...(gasp)...healthy.
Really? So if you found out the chef thought washing your hands was a conspiracy created by soap companies, you would continue dining at that establishment!?
I can't speak for big bird, but I am pretty sure Elmo is a red.
Describing the swollen testicles, I know for sure that Russell Howard watches South Park
I have thought that for a long while. South Park rocks.
It's crazy to think that by todays standards Mrs. Thatcher would be called a commie socialist leftist nutjob. I miss the good old days when adults ran the show.
The Overton window hasn't moved to the right dimwit
Keys are typically brass and non magnetic.
I was just going to post this, I studied this at school, my teacher told us that if it's going to stick to anything, it's got to be sticky or greasy
Neither are piercings.
I love how he laughs at his own jokes 😂
Well, to be fair, his writers probably wrote most of it. He can appreciate a good quip, like all of us.
sign of a good comedian in my opinion
Being a kiwi that was f**king brilliant.
I was there in the live audience when he did that Kiwi riot/Sesame Street episode
I'd love to see him live. He's brilliant. ❤
@@lashinka2574 Yeah, he's funny 🤣
@@oliversherman2414 In your own words, how would you describe the true benefits that you received from having had the covid vaccines that those who had none missed out on/went without?
@@safeeffective385 Well, my sister really struggled with covid throughout the pandemic and still lives with the affects of long covid to this day. So, I was glad to be double jabbed
@@oliversherman2414 What you're going to have to do is show some proof here that the well over 70,000,000 of us that had no covid jabs are any worse off than those of you that chose to participate .
Surface tension that’s why it stuck lol genius !
Ellen's looking well.
I’ve heard from countless individuals that regret getting the covid jabs, who stopped getting more.
And I've talked to hundreds that have had zero, and not even one regrets their decision.
In fact, the vast majority agree that not participating in this is one of the best decisions that we’ve ever made in our lives.
☝ All that I need to know, right there ☝
That bell end on gbn needs to cover his face even when covid is over.
Wearing a mask actually is a lot like „keeping a fart in your trousers“. In the sense that it may annoy you a little, but you do it altruistically, so that others don’t have to find out how you smell inside if you know’I‘m saying.
A point missed by the press so far: Keys are commonly made of brass, which is non-magnetic.
Yeah I don’t think it’s the job of the press to tell you what a key is made of, regardless of what you might use that information for. It’s clear that you should use a magnet to find out whether something is magnetic. Or just see if it is covered in metal like spoons, as Russell pointed out.
Video: shows clip of confused woman who clearly doesn't know what you apparently know about keys.
You: "the press missed the point what keys are made out of"
WTF how did you leap from her confusion to realising that the press doesn't teach us every single little useless life lesson?
Unless they're Steel and nickel coated.
Just saying.
Must be time for your 4th booster guys
Guffaw guffaw! So hilarious. Must be the thousandth time I've heard that joke. 😂 PS, me and almost everyone I know has had all the vaccines, no injuries, no deaths. Funny that.
@@lashinka2574 congratulations on your good luck. but you really should stop getting them.
@@lashinka2574 What you're going to have to do is show some proof here that the well over 70,000,000 of us that had no covid jabs are any worse off than those of you that chose to participate .
Until then, quite literally all of your talking points are rendered completely debunked and moot.
Hope that helps!
If that's actually her, she's got a weird voice
Yes, Russell, know who else has expressed 'reservations' about these injections (whilst facing federal mandates)?
NASA JPL scientists.
"We can do the math" they said, in their open letter opposing mandates.
So er...........
Yeah, I see that logic. Producing and knowing how satellites work is clearly the same as knowing medicine. Yeah, totally makes sense. Why don't you just ask a mathematician, if it's just about knowing math?
I thought you guys don't like government institutions (JBL is a federal lab), without generalising too much. Unless it supports your conclusion I guess. Ah, why do i bother, that's actually very human, it's called confirmation bias. But please still ask yourself that question. It's always good tonne critical, including of yourself and your own opinions and thoughts. I try to be that as well. That's even advice I have from a TED-talk by a brain surgeon, to reference an actual expert. Will provide a link (to the TED-talk), as it was good overal as well.
Corrections: to be critical of yourself, not "tonne".
I meant brain scientist, not surgeon. But he actually says he is a psychiatrist, although I still consider that an expert on the topic.
m.ruclips.net/video/MLKj1puoWCg/видео.html
Seen the science lately (real science, I mean, not the Pharma press releases)? Not looking so clever now, are you Russell?
m.ruclips.net/video/L9rkQJ91VOE/видео.html
He doesn't need to respond to that. He is 1) a comedian. 2) you can't just reference "science" as a source. That is not a source. What science? What study? Who defined "the science"? Called the burden of proof (fallacy if you want him to prove you wrong, when you didn't even bother to prove your own point). Now to make a less relevant point: where did you get all the money to read studies blocked by a paywall? As far as I know, Sci-Hub doesn't work anymore, as it is illegal and I think there was a court case against it from Elsevier, in India.
Here's my science...I am fine,and not dead,almost was too scared of the needles,but I braved through,and now...I still ain't dead,I don't feel mind controlled,and despite being around alot of covid I didn't get sick. Pfizer CEO said creepy stuff sure...but if the vaccine had issues,I would have told you.
Also my nuts are fine,rather proud of my normal nuts actually,nothing happened to them. Anybody else with apparently durable nuts?
@@LeanAndMean44 Do you take offense to the word "propaganda spam bot"? Do you prefer "shill"? "Grifter"? "Propagandist"? "Fearmonger"?
love you Russell but how naive you are!
Please explain all the unusual deaths of fit young athletes which is happening world wide since the vaccination programme started. Each to their own beliefs but please don't make fun of those who believe different to you.
He's not making fun of people with different beliefs, he's making fun of idiots
Well, the difficulty in answering this concern is - as you say - who do you believe? To take this example, it would appear that this particular claim was checked by several authorities including fifa and the who, and found that they were either pre existing conditions or deaths that pre dated the pandemic itself! (The links are on Google if you need a source). So this appears to be a non concern relating to the vaccine.
But
Obviously my difficulty here is that if you don't trust fifa or Google or the who or any source that I could give you... then what else is there for me to say? I'd love to be able to reassure you but as you rightly point out; It comes down to what you personally believe.
So instead I would ask that you consider what is your responsibility to your community. If the vaccine is dangerous then the sheer amount of people affected negatively worldwide would surely have been catastrophic by now.
It isn't.
So... do you act to protect yourself and those around you from the disease that is killing people? Or do you stay away from a vaccine that - if it was harmful - is taking its sweet time to be so?
I wish you the best in your decision
@@tarrisvaal Of course the vaccine is 100% effective and safe. Except most of the Covid cases now have been vaccinated and Phizer have been forced to admit to 1223 deaths related to their vaccine IN THE FIRST THREE MONTHS. And at its worst, the virus had a 99% recovery rate and average age of mortality of 82.5, higher than the national average according to the ONS, the government's own statistics. Almost all young people were asymptomatic and at very little risk.
@@simonrunswick5730 I believe the vaccine was actually rated at 70-90% effective depending on variant and source. It was never said to be complete protection, which is why even people who are vaccinated can still get the virus (albeit that they do tend to suffer far milder symptoms).
Its a vaccine. Not a cure.
As for the number of people still coming down with it despite vaccination, that sadly is a numbers game. If the vaccine is 99% effective (for example) and 100 people are exposed to the virus, that's still 1 person coming down with it. If deaths from the virus were say 1% then in theory it's 1 in 10000 people who would succumb. But when we are talking populations in the millions that number rises exponentially and that's assuming everyone was vaccinated. Without that shield it gets far worse.
I can understand some people dislike the idea of vaccines (they always have since they were invented in the 1700s) but at the end of the day even a low efficacy vaccine will help to some degree and the more people have it the harder it is for the virus to keep its hold on a population
@@tarrisvaal Do you take offense to the word "propaganda spam bot"? Do you prefer "shill"? "Grifter"? "Propagandist"? "Fearmonger"?
This isn’t aging well 😂😂
It aged perfectly actually........ well....... not for right wingers. 😂
@@lashinka2574 "the right wingers" lol ... so now medical treatment is a political loyalty test ... what a mess ...
@@lashinka2574 The densely-populated heart of Africa with >1B people also had little to no covid jabs, has had very low rates of covid sickness/death, and “long covid”.
So does that make them “right wingers” as well?
@@lashinka2574 In your own words, how would you describe the true benefits that you received from having had the covid vaccines that those who had none missed out on/went without?
Perhaps instead of living in complete fear of COVID-19, it would be better to encourage healthier lifestyles and work to improve the slow pandemic of chronic lifestyle diseases exacerbated by COVID-19?
What like wearing a mask and getting yourself vaccinated?
@@godamid4889 Lifestyle diseases can be defined as diseases linked with one’s lifestyle. These diseases are non-communicable diseases. They are caused by lack of physical activity, unhealthy eating, alcohol, substance use disorders and smoking tobacco, which can lead to heart disease, stroke, obesity, type II diabetes and lung cancer. The diseases that appear to increase in frequency as countries become more industrialized and people live longer include Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, atherosclerosis, asthma, cancer, chronic liver disease or cirrhosis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, colitis, irritable bowel syndrome, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, chronic kidney failure, osteoporosis, PCOD, stroke, depression, obesity and vascular dementia.
@@JK_JK_JK and? Did you have to hold your breath while typing all that or could you manage to do two things at once?
This is just fancy whataboutism.
@@JK_JK_JK also, for context, I watched someone close to me die alone, over zoom, because of COVID. Your bland indifference to the suffering of people affected by COVID is galling and inexcusable.
@@godamid4889 It's amazing that the fearmongers here are so brainwashed that they are triggered just by encouraging a healthy lifestyle to be...(gasp)...healthy.
Sorry, but the British are becoming a caricature of a caricature.
Stick to comedy rather than medical advice Russell.
Really? So if you found out the chef thought washing your hands was a conspiracy created by soap companies, you would continue dining at that establishment!?
@@danieljob3184 This comment did not age well...
He has medical advice at home, any time. Wife is a doctor in public hospital, on front line.
Except his medical advice is exactly the same as majority of medical experts out there......
@@lashinka2574 he's still wrong wrt to getting inject1ons