C
Captain Nemesis
Yes.Does having the jab stop you getting it or spreading it?
Not 100%, of course, but to a large extent, yes.
Yes.Does having the jab stop you getting it or spreading it?
How large?Yes.
Not 100%, of course, but to a large extent, yes.
Says the man wth views so bizarre that a strong case for sectioning him could be based on them.You truly are very very thick!
There is something very fundamentally wrong with you.So after forcing everyone to be vaccinated to try and slow the infection rate, what next, forcibly sterilizing people who can pass on debilitating hereditary diseases and syndromes ?
They are so that venue etc operators can know who has had two vaccinations.Does no one know?
And Ill try one last time, and despite knowing that some people dislike it, Ill use big letters to form the important words you missed out, and Ill put those words on separate lines in the hope it will slow you down enough for you to read and understand them.I'll try one last time.
With the delta variant, being vaccinated does not prevent transmission of the disease,
None at all.Certainly no hope that you'll answer a simple question honestly.
And Ill try one last time, and despite knowing that some people dislike it, Ill use big letters to form the important words you missed out, and Ill put those words on separate lines in the hope it will slow you down enough for you to read and understand them.
With the delta variant, being vaccinated does not prevent transmission of the disease
BY
PEOPLE
WHO
CONTRACT
IT
EVEN
THOUGH
THEY
ARE
VACCINATED.
Maybe not even that - its always perfectly possible for an opinion to be perfectly reasonable, perfectly logical, evidence based, non-perverse, etc, but then for events to occur which make that opinion no longer reasonable and logical etc. And those events dont have to be a recognition of things which were, or should have been, already known - they can be genuinely new things arising.Exactly. Mind changes as aware due to circumstances that earlier opinion was incorrect.
You are part of the problem which makes politicians and others in positions of power scared to change their mind when circumstances change.People make mistakes, that's true, but the person in question is a government minister who, from the article I linked has actually stated that he does not believe in what he his doing now.
And I didnt think that it would actually need to be pointed out that even if vaccination only reduces the risk of contracting that variant by 50% that still means a 50% reduction in the number of infective people in the vaccinated population, but I guess there simply is no amount of obviousness which you are not prepared to jettison in support of your bonkers ideology.I did not think it would actually need to be pointed out that people who don't have it won't transmit it, whether vaccinated or not.
Which is why no one* is really surprised that the various Covid vaccines aren't perfect."Most vaccines don't fully protect against infection, even if they can block symptoms from appearing. As a result, vaccinated people can unknowingly carry and spread pathogens. Occasionally, they can even start epidemics."
"There are two main types of immunity you can achieve with vaccines. One is so-called "effective" immunity, which can prevent a pathogen from causing serious disease, but can't stop it from entering the body or making more copies of itself. The other is "sterilising immunity", which can thwart infections entirely, and even prevent asymptomatic cases. The latter is the aspiration of all vaccine research, but surprisingly rarely achieved."
Very far from perfect...Which is why no one* is really surprised that the various Covid vaccines aren't perfect.
*No one worth listening to