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farmbif
08-10-2021, 08:04 AM
I was never in military, had to register for the draft but never got drafted.
I was reading yesterday that when you join armed forces they make you into a pin cushion making you get as many as 17 vaccines for all sorts of stuff.
is this what really happens?

ourflat
08-10-2021, 08:07 AM
To some degree yes! Now the SOD is mandating COVID-19 jabs so you will see a mass exit of members leaving the service in lieu of the jab.

The mobility lines were a real pain too!

Frank

richhodg66
08-10-2021, 08:14 AM
No, you won't.

They started mandating the Antrax series several years before I retired. There was a lot of crying but the bottom line, everybody got it. Same thing with mandatory flu shots every year.

Yes, if you are in the military, you are expected to go to some pretty noxious parts of the world and live in pretty spartan conditions and as such, it's in your interests, and the mission, to not get sick. The gammaglobulin shots (spelling?) we got before Desert Storm was intended mainly for hepatitus I'm told, but sure seemed to prevent a lot of other stuff.

CastingFool
08-10-2021, 08:19 AM
I still have my shot record, somewhere stored away. Lol

richhodg66
08-10-2021, 08:35 AM
I still have my shot record, somewhere stored away. Lol

Yep.

I find it surprising how many people seem to not understand that your health is imperative to mission readiness in the military, it isn't like a regular job. If you can't do what is required of you, mission failure can result and people die because you couldn't function.

Besides shots, you are required to get in a dentist's chair and get an exam once a year or you are automatically non-deployable and your chain of command will make it painful for you until you get in that dentist's chair. A sad chapter of my life was an unfortunate time spent as a battalion S-1 in a direct support field artillery battalion in a unit in Alaska that liked to pretend they were RDF. How many people in your command were non deployable for whatever reason was a stat that people took pretty seriously all the way up to Division and when Private Snuffy was CAT IV dental, people got excited. Same for hearing tests.

When you take that oath, you belong to the military and your physical well being is important to them. If you go out and get hurt due to doing something stupid, they can and will punish you under the UCMJ, seen it happen. If you're not willing to deal with this, stay out of the military.

bakerjw
08-10-2021, 09:39 AM
The only out of it is to investigate the vaccines and decline on religious grounds. Many vaccines are manufactured using fetal cell lines. If one is seriously pro-life, taking a vaccine manufactured with those cell lines certainly goes against ones religious convictions. It would be akin to forcing a Jew to eat pork.
With the Covid treatments, the J&J one uses the PER.C6 cell line and the AZ one used HEK293.

Ethical alternatives are out there, but Big Pharma only cares about $$$$$.

zarrinvz24
08-10-2021, 09:42 AM
When I entered the USMC they brought all the interns over from Naval Hospital to practice drawing blood. It wasn't pretty and I had some pretty bad bruising. So to answer your question, Yes. It is almost an assembly line of sorts. Take 2 steps forward, shot in both of your arms. 2 more steps, another 2 shots.

Alstep
08-10-2021, 09:46 AM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

gwpercle
08-10-2021, 09:49 AM
I was never in military, had to register for the draft but never got drafted.
I was reading yesterday that when you join armed forces they make you into a pin cushion making you get as many as 17 vaccines for all sorts of stuff.
is this what really happens?

When my daughter started Louisiana State University in 1991 ...30 years ago ... she had to show proof , from the doctors office , that she had gotten 14 vaccines ... 30 years ago ... 14 required vaccines ... I remember there was ... mumps , measels , chicken pox , ruebella , polio , meningitus , encephalitus , diptheria , tetanus , pertussis ... that's all I can remember , and I don't know what's been added !
I can tell you this .... as soon as the Covid Vaccine is fully approved and vetted ... it will be put on the Required Vaccine List ... and LSU will not be the only school .
Required vaccines are nothing new ...not if you have any children who went to public school in Louisiana.
Gary

gwpercle
08-10-2021, 09:52 AM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

At least it was in the old Army ... this new Army ... didn't they change a solder from a he to a she because he couldn't cope with being a soldier ? That don't sound like the 1967 Army !
Gary

FISH4BUGS
08-10-2021, 09:53 AM
I was raised in the military and every new posting we got shots up the wazoo. Too many to even remember what they are.

Larry Gibson
08-10-2021, 09:58 AM
In my many years in the Army I got many shots of various vaccines and some several times over the years. There were quite a few in basic and you had no choice and even the gamma globin shots at Fort Ord during Infantry training in early '65. Off to Asia in April '65 got me more and in SEA Asia other shots. More vaccines and boosters in the years that followed to other "exotic" places in the world. As mentioned the soldiers health is of the utmost concern to command, especially when on a Special Forces A-Team. Even had to get another smallpox inoculation prior to deploying to Iraq in '04.

Frankly, in all those years I never saw a single serious reaction to any of the shots/vaccines/inoculations.

dannyd
08-10-2021, 10:15 AM
Don’t know what they do now but we got shots for everything. But that 1,200,000 units of Bicillin sucked the most.

287341

richhodg66
08-10-2021, 10:17 AM
"Frankly, in all those years I never saw a single serious reaction to any of the shots/vaccines/inoculations."

Niether did I. During Desert Storm, they issued these pills you were supposed to take which (as I understood it) were supposed to help the atropine injectors do what they were supposed to do in the event you had to use them. Took the first round of them a day or so before going north, made me pretty nauseous. They put out reminders every six hours on the command net as I recall, I took them one more time, not as bad second time, but when we crossed the berm on MOPP 0, I figured the NBC threat was nil so I quit taking them and after a couple of days they said to quit taking them. Honestly, that was the only time in 24 years of service I questioned any substance the Army told me to take.

sundog
08-10-2021, 10:20 AM
Richhodg66 post #5, true. I expanded my 'education' really fast when I went to an aviation battalion as the Ops NCO. Try putting together an overseas deployment with the right kind of people who are mission qualified. Any soldier on any day qualified and the next day not, for a myriad of reasons. The S1 becomes one of the king pins. Shot records? Yeah, a really big deal!

richhodg66
08-10-2021, 10:27 AM
Richhodg66 post #5, true. I expanded my 'education' really fast when I went to an aviation battalion as the Ops NCO. Try putting together an overseas deployment with the right kind of people who are mission qualified. Any soldier on any day qualified and the next day not, for a myriad of reasons. The S1 becomes one of the king pins. Shot records? Yeah, a really big deal!

Being a battalion primary staff officer is the cross you must bear as a junior captain and mine was as an S-1, probably the worst one, and I had the misfortune of doing it in a battalion that got ear marked to furl its colors as part of a reorganization so the workload multiplied 100 fold. Miserable time and when I left and got back into an ops type of role, I was much happier, but I will say this for the experience; I learned an awful lot about bigger picture and behind the scenes stuff that go on and never realized how big a stick I wheeled in the organization. Besides the XO and CSM, I was about the only guy who could walk right in to the Battalion Commander's office and stop what he was doing to take care of something emergent and important. Nobody likes being a staff puke, but they do, in fact, make it possible for the guy or gal in charge to do what they need to do.

contender1
08-10-2021, 10:31 AM
Back when I was young & dumb,, and joined the Army,, I didn't think anything about getting shots. And yes,, the Army made sure we got a lot of them.

1hole
08-10-2021, 10:31 AM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

Roger that.

When you take the oath you're "in" and nothing about it requires your consent; that's the way it has to be to function. But you do belong to Uncle Sam and, as a valuable item, they don't want people dying from a lack of care so they really aren't bad. (Even scrawny girls live through it these days!) For how many shots, there is no count. There is a standard batch you take early on and more later if you're being sent into a nasty part of the world.

The young people who give the shots have to be trained too and some injections do leak a little but I never heard of anyone dying from a few shots; we took 'em and lived with it. I once watched the wobbly guy in front of me collapse from fear but even he lived.

The blue skin patch from a leaking shot is only discolored due to an internal leak, it's not a bruise in the proper sense. The blue
itself is harmless, it doesn't last forever so forget it.

Kraschenbirn
08-10-2021, 11:27 AM
Was discussing this with a couple of other vets not so long ago. Not only was I inoculated against about everything in the disease dictionary during my two tours in 'Nam but when working for the USAF as a CIVILIAN during the H1N1 ('Swine Flu') scare of 1976 we were bussed from our office to the base hospital with the directive: "get your shot or don't even think about coming in tomorrow morning"...and, sure 'nuff, next morning AF Security Police at the gates were checking for vaccination slips. Btw...for those of you missed out on this little fiasco, within 48 hours, 40% of base personnel were experiencing "adverse reactions" to the vaccine. A few years later, a doctor who had been in residency at a large hospital in 1976 told me that, afterward, it was estimated that, nationwide, the vaccine had killed more people than the H1N1 flu strain.

Bill

snowwolfe
08-10-2021, 11:28 AM
The only out of it is to investigate the vaccines and decline on religious grounds.

Declining on religious grounds only works if you can prove you belong to a religion that prohibits vaccinations. You can't just wake up one day and say I decline for religious grounds. Your point has to be valid.

zarrinvz24
08-10-2021, 11:31 AM
I've seen 1 bad reaction to a vaccine in 17.5 years of service. It was the Japanese encephalitis vaccine, a disease which is spread by mosquitos, and the shot was administered to everyone prior to our deployment to Japan. Immediate Anaphylactic shock resulted. The Marine lived but didn't deploy with us. He was still awaiting discharge 8 months later when we returned from deployment. Long-term lasting effects were a heart murmur, I'm not sure if anything else developed after he left the service. It was sad to see, but adverse reactions to vaccines aren't anything new.

dannyd
08-10-2021, 12:18 PM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

Don’t know about you but back in the day Doc with the gun or needle was before the table to get paid. No shot no money, so we had very few problems with people getting their shots.

BunkTheory
08-10-2021, 12:27 PM
well in 2008 they gave us 18 admitted shots, but MOST of those were double and and triple needle syringe injectors that did not match the big photo poster on the wall. SO we figured we had been given perhaps 25 to 27 different actual chemicals.

The fun thing is, people actually do get messed up by the injections. Some think its 1 in 4.

downzero
08-10-2021, 01:10 PM
I was never in military, had to register for the draft but never got drafted.
I was reading yesterday that when you join armed forces they make you into a pin cushion making you get as many as 17 vaccines for all sorts of stuff.
is this what really happens?

Yep. Readiness for battle is what the military is all about, not political shenanigans. You get the vaccines and you don't question it, and life goes on.

Bulldogger
08-10-2021, 02:32 PM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

Exactly

gbrown
08-10-2021, 02:33 PM
I went in in 1970, every Saturday morning was shot day. Went in by platoon to the dayroom. Depending on the vaccines, right or left sleeve pulled up and sometimes both. They were using the pneumatic guns on occasion. You had to remain still or get a nasty cut. One medic had a pneumatic injector in his left hand, a tray of hypodermic needles to his right. As you came up, he used the gun, then stuck you with the needle. He was good. Everybody went thru, some shaking in their boots. Most of the vaccines caused no issues. On the last Saturday before graduating, we got the bubonic plague vaccine. My platoon was the 3rd of 5 to go through. 3rd and 2nd were before us. I'm the 1st squad leader of the 1st platoon. We get back into ranks, and I am checking my people and I look down at 3rd platoon, and there are people on the ground. Uh-Oh. I go over and tell a drill sgt., and he hotfoots it down there. Drill sgts. put us in our barracks. We carried 3 of our people out to go to the hospital. Don't know how many others from other platoons were transported. Didn't bother me or my squad, though. What was sad was when a soldier was going overseas and lost his shot record. Got to go to the dispensary and get about 12 shots. Wasn't a pleasant sight. I saw it in person, several times.

beechbum444
08-10-2021, 03:02 PM
Look up the “peanut butter shot” when you get bored …

EMC45
08-10-2021, 04:00 PM
Got tons of shots when I joined the Navy and throughout my enlistment. Also got tons of shots in the Air Force as well. When the doc in the AF saw my Navy shot record he started shaking his head. He said half of what I got in the Navy they can't even give you anymore.......Nice. Most of my shot record says "unknown manufacturer/unknown expiration".

Wolfdog91
08-10-2021, 05:22 PM
Yep I got like 12 sperate ones at reception
Followed by anthrax for deployment and a few others. Probably got 25 total

Wolfdog91
08-10-2021, 05:24 PM
Ps your sick as a dog the following two or three days lol, but with as nasty as some of them guys are ( 17 yr who think it's normal not to shower weekly ) I'm glad we had them

Wolfdog91
08-10-2021, 05:25 PM
Look up the “peanut butter shot” when you get bored …

It's a pill now lol

navyvet
08-10-2021, 06:15 PM
Look up the “peanut butter shot” when you get bored …

That made me laugh. Do remember well. Could always tell what week of boot camp they were in by the limping.

navyvet
08-10-2021, 06:19 PM
Yep.

When you take that oath, you belong to the military and your physical well being is important to them. If you go out and get hurt due to doing something stupid, they can and will punish you under the UCMJ, seen it happen. If you're not willing to deal with this, stay out of the military.
And that is what they told us about getting a tattoo.
If it gets infected you can be brought up on charges for destroying
Government property.

Mohawk Daddy
08-10-2021, 06:28 PM
I still have my old shot record too and it shows the last flu shot they made me take just before I was discharged in late 68. It made me so sick I thought I was dying, but it worked so well that I have never needed another one since.

Mk42gunner
08-10-2021, 06:53 PM
The Gamagobulin, aka the golfball in the left cheek, wasn't much fun the next day. I was glad I had a bottom rack and didn't have to try to jump down. Rumor Control had it that only those of us going to Great Lakes had to get it, not the ones in San Diego or Florida.

The worst was the Chicken Pox vaccine, given with a pneumatic gun. I watched the guy in front of me get a nice circular scar when the Corpsman's hand shook as he pulled the trigger. The bad part was I had already had chicken pox as a kid.

Robert

Winger Ed.
08-10-2021, 07:38 PM
you get as many as 17 vaccines for all sorts of stuff. is this what really happens?

Oh yeah. Depending on where ya go---- it's a lot more than 17.
You may only get 17 in Boot Camp, but there's more on down the road.

I served from '73-80, and traveled a bit.
My old shot record is around someplace, it's the standard yellow one that they give you when ya get a passport and leave the country.
Mine is just about full of dates and stamps from what all we got.
Any time you went over seas or on a deployment/trip, they'd run ya in to get a few for whatever part of the world you were going to.

Sometimes the wheels turn pretty fast too, and it's amazing what all vaccinations the military keeps on hand.
One morning I got a call at 0500 to pack for 2 weeks, and be at Sick Bay in 30 minutes for shots.
The Navy Corpsmen were waiting, and had a big tray of them laid out and were waiting on us.

It was only four of them that time, then I went on to the hanger, got on a Huey for a quick ride to Andrews AFB.
There, a AF C-130 was 'turning', all warmed up, and waiting to take us to Mexico City.
We were rolling towards the duty runway before the Crew Chief had the door latched.

I didn't make that trip, but the same thing happened to some of my buddies when they got sent to Cairo, Egypt.

Active duty GIs get vaccinated for a laundry list of things in other countries that we've never even heard of.
The only bad reaction I ever saw was one guy that got sort of sick the 1st year (1978) we got the flu shot.

.

nicholst55
08-10-2021, 10:16 PM
Was discussing this with a couple of other vets not so long ago. Not only was I inoculated against about everything in the disease dictionary during my two tours in 'Nam but when working for the USAF as a CIVILIAN during the H1N1 ('Swine Flu') scare of 1976 we were bussed from our office to the base hospital with the directive: "get your shot or don't even think about coming in tomorrow morning"...and, sure 'nuff, next morning AF Security Police at the gates were checking for vaccination slips. Btw...for those of you missed out on this little fiasco, within 48 hours, 40% of base personnel were experiencing "adverse reactions" to the vaccine. A few years later, a doctor who had been in residency at a large hospital in 1976 told me that, afterward, it was estimated that, nationwide, the vaccine had killed more people than the H1N1 flu strain.

Bill

I'm a Department of the Army civilian now, stationed in Korea. When I arrived, I received Smallpox, Japanese Encephalitis, Anthrax, and a couple of others that I've forgotten the names of - with periodic boosters. And yes, I've had my two (NOT mandatory, but STRONGLY RECOMMENDED) COVID jabs.

BJK
08-10-2021, 11:02 PM
Back when I was young & dumb,, and joined the Army,, I didn't think anything about getting shots. And yes,, the Army made sure we got a lot of them.

Same experience here. I could have been anywhere on the planet in 24 hours, no landing strip required, and one had to have ones shots long before arriving. One had to function and survive. Heck, you wanted to survive! Getting the shot on the tarmac wouldn't work. Yeah, we were pincushions. I have my shot record somewhere. But I'm home and don't travel to where I would ever need that stuff today. Quite happy to stay home and out of harms way, all sorts of harm. Hope what I have shots for never comes here. But slow joe and company seems quite willing to bring it into the USA and spread it around.

Lloyd Smale
08-13-2021, 05:49 AM
Once you raise your right hand and take the oath, you're gov't property. You do what you're told and go where they want you.

Yup. You take an OATH to obey the orders you receive and not just the ones that you like or agree with. I kind of chuckle at guys who are complaining. They knew when they joined but like the liberals today want to change everything. Dont like the way the military works DONT JOIN. Its not like a single soul in the service today was drafted.

ourflat
08-13-2021, 06:57 AM
Guidance is being provided that will allow a service member to decline the jab from the manufactures that use fetal remains in their products.

Nothing more to prove.

As soon as I receive the guidance I will post it.

Frank

EMC45
08-13-2021, 11:47 AM
The Gamagobulin, aka the golfball in the left cheek, wasn't much fun the next day. I was glad I had a bottom rack and didn't have to try to jump down. Rumor Control had it that only those of us going to Great Lakes had to get it, not the ones in San Diego or Florida.

The worst was the Chicken Pox vaccine, given with a pneumatic gun. I watched the guy in front of me get a nice circular scar when the Corpsman's hand shook as he pulled the trigger. The bad part was I had already had chicken pox as a kid.

Robert

I went to "great mistakes" and got that shot. The corpsman told us to sit on the affected cheek and rock back and forth on it right after we got the shot. In-processing was a flurry of shots and screaming. Good times guys.

gbrown
08-13-2021, 07:19 PM
Between working in a hospital in the 60s, and working at a local SO, I've had the gamma globulan shot about 12 times. Just work the muscle group involved. Like shots in the arm, "Drop and give me 20."