
Bad Brain
Well-known member
Yes, correlation does not mean causation. A consistent temporal relationship does though. Are you referring to Rancourt et al? …you’re speaking in general here, you need to level a specific critique about a specifc study if you want a response. One good study can disprove a million crappy ones.From what I have seen of the outlier papers and articles you present, they seem to discount or neglect to consider other reasons for the results. Things can be correlated by coincidence. For example, morbidity from cancer can be explained by people not getting tested early enough during COVID. It doesn't mean the vaccine caused it. That's just an example