@IainDale Apply here: bbc.co.uk/send/u39697902
I won't be travelling to Morecambe to join the unwitting *vaccinated* spreaders without natural immunity. Happy to join remotely @bbcquestiontime if you want to get in touch. Some questions below:
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime Were the government scientists wrong about the effectiveness of herd natural immunity first touted (we know it may have overwhelmed the NHS)?
What's the longest anyone has been vaccinated with *these* vaccines for to determine negative impact?
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime Is it immoral to vaccinate v low risk individuals when much higher risk people in the world remain unvaccinated?
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime Is it immoral for the British public to force NHS staff to accept a (small but advertised) risk of side effects of the vaccine? Furthermore some will already have antibodies so the benefits v risks for vaccination are debatable. Also big risk to the public of loss of staff.
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime Who is more likely to catch/spread Covid - an individual with natural immunity or a vaccinated individual without natural immunity?
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime The number of vaccinations delivered and its potential benefits is an easily measurable 'target' for the government. Freedom of choice and its potential benefits for individuals and society as a whole are much less easily measurable. Discuss.
@IainDale@bbcquestiontime There is genuine debate so I hope the BBC is brave enough to do the topic justice and justify my licence fee rather than simply act as a Pravda-style organ of State propaganda. If viewers on both sides of the debate come away with new perspectives you'll have performed a service.