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  • Your question was hypothetical, if thee gov makes that decision I'd go with it as they'd have vetted thee risks.

  • Your track record on this sort of argument isn't particularly good, though, is it. Better duck out again, sweet tits, just like you did in the other thread.

  • Eh? You didn't read that link, did you?

    But research has since found the chances of developing the condition after having a vaccination are extremely small.

    For example, a study into the vaccine used during the 2009 swine flu outbreak found that for every million people who had the vaccination, there were fewer than 2 extra cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome.

    And evidence suggests that you are far more likely to get Guillain-Barré syndrome from an infection, such as the flu, than the vaccine designed to prevent the infection, such as the flu jab.

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