5GCovidInjection
5GCovidInjection t1_iuzcvnv wrote
Following up on what the others said, I have to wonder what infant mortality rates were like for early human species. If, like Neanderthals and modern humans, there were species coexisting, probably mortality rates were similar given the time context.
We didn’t dramatically cut infant mortality worldwide until the 20th century or so for modern humans.
5GCovidInjection t1_j2tcv6b wrote
Reply to comment by Riversntallbuildings in European economies have developed stronger anti-trust regulations, more competitive markets, and more robust consumer protection than the US in the last 20 years. The reason for this is the EU. EU member states are incentivized to empower a strongly independent pro-competition regulator. by smurfyjenkins
It is possible in the US. We have all kinds of environmental legislation drafted in the 70s and 80s based on politicians listening to scientists.
Politicians make the decision on who to listen to. People also make similar decisions. We’ve been listening to the wrong people since the 90s.
We don’t have much time left as a country to act in the interests of consumer safety, fairness, and ethics.