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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Will You Get the A(H1N1) Vaccine? Post 302382693 by Neo on Thursday 24th of December 2009 11:06:48 AM
Old 12-24-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by frustin
"homeopathic".......
Homeopathic and herbal strategies are great for the prevention of diseases which do not have safe and effective vaccines.

However, for H1N1, the vaccine is completely safe and very cost effective.

So, in my opinion (and I am a big fan of natural treatments), it is much better to have your body injected with a very safe attenuated vaccine that causes your body to create very powerful and not dangerous antibodies, creating a real army with only one purpose, protect you from the H1N1 virus.

There are zero downsides to this strategy (the injected vaccine) and it works very well. It is also cost effective, completely safe (unless you are allergic to eggs).

So, in the case of H1N1, homeopathic methods are like fighting a powerful adversary with bows and arrows when, for the same money or less, you can fight the same enemy with a complete and powerful, proven defensive shield (like the shields on the Starship Enterprise!).

Of course, you can still enjoy boosting your immune system with natural, herbal, traditional, oriental, and homeopathic campaigns and treatments; but that should never overshadow getting a proven, safe and cost-effective vaccine to prevent a virus that, if you get it, you not only place yourself at risk, but those around you.

Modern, safe vaccines are a modern miracle of science! Just DO IT, if you can! It helps all society when its members are properly vaccinated!!!
 
SETREGID(2)						      BSD System Calls Manual						       SETREGID(2)

NAME
setregid -- set real and effective group ID LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int setregid(gid_t rgid, gid_t egid); DESCRIPTION
The real and effective group ID's of the current process are set to the arguments. If the real group ID is changed, the saved group ID is changed to the new value of the effective group ID. Unprivileged users may change the real group ID to the effective group ID and vice-versa; only the super-user may make other changes. Supplying a value of -1 for either the real or effective group ID forces the system to substitute the current ID in place of the -1 argument. The setregid() system call was intended to allow swapping the real and effective group IDs in set-group-ID programs to temporarily relinquish the set-group-ID value. This system call did not work correctly, and its purpose is now better served by the use of the setegid(2) system call. When setting the real and effective group IDs to the same value, the standard setgid() system call is preferred. RETURN VALUES
The setregid() function returns the value 0 if successful; otherwise the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indi- cate the error. ERRORS
[EPERM] The current process is not the super-user and a change other than changing the effective group-id to the real group-id was specified. SEE ALSO
getgid(2), issetugid(2), setegid(2), setgid(2), setuid(2) HISTORY
The setregid() system call appeared in 4.2BSD. BSD
April 16, 1994 BSD
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