Usdk wrote:
So I'm assuming if the parents are that worried about their kids allergy, they've probably had the kid tested for allergies. I mean if its a life and death allergy, and they discover it the hard way, the kid would have died, right? So I'm assuming they got their kid tested for allergies as well as modern medicine can do.
And the doctors must have told the parents that its some serious shit. Thats the logic i'm following when I read this thread.
Or maybe they didn't.
Usdk wrote:
So this is going to turn into another thread about aestu hating doctors for being "pretenders" and other such names he's going to use, when really he has no fucking idea what hes talking about?
Actually, I said the opposite.
Part of having respect for science is disdaining pseudoscience. Religion is a human affliction not specific to religion. See: "scientology".
Usdk wrote:
Sorry azelma, your thread is about to die and yet another thread is going to get Aestu'd.
If that is so it is because the man is being put before the argument. I've spoken only of my own experience and what the known facts are. To fixate on me is small.
Laelia wrote:
This is wrong. The purpose of washing your hands with soap is for the soap to make your hands slippery so that vigorous rubbing under running water will cause microorganisms to slide off your hands. Proper hand washing with normal soap does reduce the number of microorganisms on your hands, and it's been experimentally demonstrated to reduce disease transmission in a variety of settings (including schools). Antibacterial soap doesn't seem to be much more effective than regular soap as a routine measure, and routine use of antibacterials is unwise due to the danger of bacteria developing resistance.
And what I am saying is that it really doesn't matter if kids get a bit sick. As to mitigating the occurrence resistance to ubiquitous antibacterials...gl with that.
Mns wrote:
No dude, you don't understand. Aestu ate fried chicken with peanuts around someone with a peanut allergy so therefore, its perfectly fine because nobody has varying severity of peanut allergies because this one kid didn't. Coincidentally, Aestu eating fried chicken with peanuts also makes him a gourmand because an asian guy made it for him.
What is your point, Mayo? What evidence do we have that this child is seriously endangered in the way you describe? That he has this singular, unrealistically intense occurrence of what is a common allergy?