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Okay, back when I got shots, they didn't give them all to you in one or two or three little courses, you know what I'm saying? The shot vaccine schedules have been expedited so much that how I used to get shots 30 or 40 years ago is completely different than how they do it today. And it also goes from having around four or five vaccines to having, I don't know, 10 or 12 or something like that, including things like, I don't know, the HPV virus phase. I don't know any baby who needs that right off the bat. I know, some medical people say yes, but you know what, other medical people say no. And that's always the case, right, with vaccines. There's different technologies like we just talked about. There are two totally different types of technologies that affect human anatomies differently. One's been really well thought out and tested over decades and decades. The other one has not. I don't mind telling you I've never had a COVID shot. I'm not going to get one. In 30 years if they have it perfected and they have it real thought out, I'll get one. You see, it's not the vaccine that I guessed. It's the rush and unresearched science behind it. Now, when we talk about parental rights, which is something that needs to be brought into this conversation, you see down in Texas, we fully believe that the parents in charge of the child, not the school, not the doctors, not the state, and not the government, parents. In fact, we believe in it so much it's codified in our state constitution. I love Texas. That being said, it's up to the parent. If that parent doesn't want their child vaccinated, that's the choice. My daughter vaccinates her children. But she doesn't do it based on the timeline that her pediatrician recommends. She has it stretched out. Her son got all of his shots before he started school. But he didn't get them all when he was just a baby. She waited until he was older enough. That's just safe. Just being safe. Now when it comes to whether or not they should go to school, yes, and this is why. My simple mind goes like this. If a child is vaccinated, they don't have nothing to worry about from an unvaccinated child. If a child is unvaccinated, well, that's on them and their family for being unvaccinated. So I don't fully understand the argument of why unvaccinated children shouldn't be allowed in school considering that most of the kids are going to choose to be vaccinated, and it doesn't affect them at all. KJ5, I ask you.
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