SUBSCRIBE TO NEW SCIENTIST

Health

Feeds

This Is A Veru One Sided Argument

Thu Oct 29 12:03:28 GMT 2009 by John

I feel the who sexual issue is a red herring which detracts from the real issue of the safety and efficacy of this vaccine.

Also how about all the girls who did not want the vaccine but were forced to have it by their parents?

Why is this ignored.

This Is A Veru One Sided Argument

Thu Oct 29 13:03:26 GMT 2009 by Vendicar Decarian

"Also how about all the girls who did not want the vaccine but were forced to have it by their parents?" - John

Were there any?

What evidence do you have that they exist?

This Is A Veru One Sided Argument

Thu Oct 29 16:18:20 GMT 2009 by Oji

And what about all those kids who are forced to go to school or eat their vegetables by their cruel parents.

Going To The Dentist

Fri Oct 30 10:44:47 GMT 2009 by John

How in the world can you equate taking an experimental vaccine that has never been proven to actually work in the real world with going to the dentist.

Do you call this Science?

I call it Social engineering.

All comments should respect the New Scientist House Rules. If you think a particular comment breaks these rules then please use the "Report" link in that comment to report it to us.

If you are having a technical problem posting a comment, please contact technical support.

ADVERTISEMENT

Latest news articles

Magnetic 'eyesight' helps birds find their way

11:00 01 November 2009

Birds have magnetic particles in their nostrils, but it's their visual system that's critical for navigation

The best of this year's science writing

10:00 01 November 2009

Three annual collections look at everything from living off-grid to scratching an itch inside your head to the internet's potential to rewire our brains

Sticky future for the spider suture

12:00 31 October 2009

The genetic mechanism for the ultra-strong glue spiders use to trap prey has been unpicked, and could lead to bio-friendly surgical adhesives

Could you stop being hysterical?

11:00 31 October 2009

Hysteria by Andrew Scull explores the history of a disease that was once practically a fashion statement and has strong resonances today

ADVERTISEMENT

Partners

We are partnered with Approved Index. Visit the site to get free quotes from website designers and a range of web, IT and marketing services in the UK.

Login for full access