Of course it's always the other guy that engages in propaganda. Never those who are on the side of light.
You really don't understand that each side thinks they have a "well-considered balanced view that has taken into account the full picture of the circumstances"?
Detecting whether something said by a given person is propaganda, or a balanced pragmatic view, often comes down to understanding the personality and philosophy of life that person has.
Because often what people believe, and what they promote online, often relates to the philosophy they live by.
For example, some people, the alternative health nuts, are philosophically opposed to conventional scientific medicine, and will always criticize anything conventional, and will always promote an alternative treatment for any illness, even if those alternative treatments do not work.
There are lots of people who follow the alternative health "religion" online, and their views are always propaganda, because they are not out to find the truth, they are out to destroy the reputation of conventional medicine, and are out to promote the philosophy of alternative medicine. They are completely biased in this way. I am not mentioning any names, but those alternative health nuts on this forum know who they are!
You also find the reverse situation, where you get science nuts who are opposed to any form of alternative treatment, even though some alternative treatments can be effective. But these science nuts will not admit that, because they are not after the truth, but are in a philosophical war against alternative medicine.
Now if you are ill, and need some treatments to improve your health, neither the alternative health nuts nor the science nuts are going to give you the complete picture, because they are only out to promote their own side. Myself, when it comes to health, I do not have such a bias, because my priority is a pragmatic one: I want to improve my health, and I don't care what system of treatment I use, as long as it works.
So you have to understand the philosophies of the person to know whether they are pushing propaganda.
Mind for example has stated he has a libertarian philosophy on life. Most of Mind's comments and views can be traced back to that libertarian view. For example, he is against enforced use of masks or enforced lockdowns, not because these things don't work, but because they run against his beliefs of libertarian freedom. Even if it were proven beyond doubt that these measures have saved millions of lives, their enforcement still runs counter to libertarian freedom, so they will never be accepted by those of a libertarian philosophy.
So you see how personal philosophy can lead to propaganda and bias.
But not everyone puts their personal philosophy first. Some people just have a pragmatic approach, and simply want to go down the route which works best. These pragmatists have no "ism" to push on the world, they just want a practical, effective solution.
So this is what I look at when reading the comments of people: I look for any underlying philosophy first, and then judge whether they are just looking for a practical solution, or whether they are actually surreptitiously just trying to push their philosophy onto me.
I don't think that is true.
There have been investigational research into using mRNA vaccine in cancer treatment, but to my knowledge none of those has ever resulted in an approved therapy. As far as I can tell, the Pfizer covid-19 vaccine was the first mRNA vaccine to receive regulatory approval.
Nature - The Tangled History of mRNA vaccines
Wikipedia - mRNA Vaccines
I think you are right.
I read that mRNA vaccines have been used for over a decade as cancer treatments, but it seems this is being done in clinical trials, rather than being a licensed therapy.
Edited by Hip, 31 March 2022 - 03:40 PM.