Recent comments in /f/boston

Nicktyelor t1_jefcg8s wrote

Legit favorite restaurant and bar in the city. Cozy modern setting without being pretentious or typical generic gastropub interior. Awesome chef with rotating menus and new dishes. Drinks always on point. Very reasonable prices. And the staff/owners are just wonderful people.

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Aesop_Rocks t1_jefb9o7 wrote

Serious answers... First question, no, no one seems to be able to explain why that's happening. Second question, also no. For why, see answer to the first question.

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Darklighter10 t1_jefb19z wrote

Other than draft kings, the single most covered item on the news and here is the MBTA slow zones, signal issues, and the push to make things better. They just hired a new GM that has been covered several times already just in the last few days. How is it possible you have missed all of this????

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McFlyParadox t1_jefavvw wrote

>For instance I assume a city government couldn't compel, say, librarians to get smallpox or yellow fever vaccine given actual infectious disease risks in MA in 2023.

And if there ever was - somehow - an outbreak of smallpox or yellow fever, I would 100% expect librarians to be covered under any govt-mandates regarding vaccines for those diseases.

If you're going to use hypothetical arguments, at least make sure the whole thing matches, rather than picking and choosing.

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McFlyParadox t1_jefa8bz wrote

An EUA is being approved. An EUA is authorized during public health emergencies, after all the hurdles regarding efficacy and hazards have been cleared, but the rest of the bureaucracy hasn't been completed just yet. There never were any "unapproved" vaccines or treatments floating around, at any point (excluding the times when covidiots were suggesting bleach enemas and horse de-wormer),

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