meaner gene
Diamond Member
- Feb 11, 2017
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Republicans are blocking passports because they want to hide their moron base who won’t get vaccinated
They want the freedom to infect other people.
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Republicans are blocking passports because they want to hide their moron base who won’t get vaccinated
yea.....maybe we should allow millions of more to die before we trust the scienceView attachment 486713View attachment 486705So. . . your link says that they can still spread it. . . and?There has not been enough double blind testing to compare those who have been vaxed to those who have contracted the virus naturally and developed T-cell background immunity to make that statement.If you are vaxxed, you can still get it and spread it.As it won't harm them if they get it? They could just catch it and go on with their lives.Why NOT? We need to offer incentives for young people in the 16-28 range if we're going to reach the 65-70% range for herd immunity.
It won't harm MOST young people - All? Nope. And they can asymptomatic and spread it. Getting young people vaxed is essential to reach herd immunity.
And if you have no commodities? No, your effective rate at being hospitalized for this is zero.
Chances of a fully vaxed individual getting and spreading the COVIDS is minuscule.
Time for vaccine passports. If one is too much of a sceerdy cat to get poked, they don't deserve to attend sporting events and concerts ...
OR get on a plane!
You have no data to back up that statement. This is a position based on shareholder interests. . . and, quite frankly, an agenda.
Learn something
Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus?
You’ve been vaccinated; can you now safely see your friends and family? New research hints that vaccinated people may be less likely to transmit the coronavirus, but they are not 100% in the clear.theconversation.com
AND the possibility of this is slim. DERP
2. Does infection always mean transmission?
Transmission happens when enough viral particles from an infected person get into the body of an uninfected person. In theory, anyone infected with the coronavirus could potentially transmit it. But a vaccine will reduce the chance of this happening.
In general, if vaccination doesn’t completely prevent infection, it will significantly reduce the amount of virus coming out of your nose and mouth – a process called shedding – and shorten the time that you shed the virus. This is a big deal. A person who sheds less virus is less likely to transmit it to someone else.
This seems to be the case with coronavirus vaccines. In a recent preprint studywhich has yet to be peer reviewed, Israeli researchers tested 2,897 vaccinated people for signs of coronavirus infection. Most had no detectable virus, but people who were infected had one-quarter the amount of virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people tested at similar times post-infection.
Less coronavirus virus means less chance of spreading it, and if the amount of virus in your body is low enough, the probability of transmitting it may reach almost zero.
You're wasting my time with disinformation. Not sure where you get yours, but gotta be the same cesspool several others in USMB are getting theirs.
And you have this erroneous belief that science is done by consensus. . . that it is a dogmatic, static religion.Yeah, trust MisterBeale - His memes are BETTER than your science!
It isn't.
Seems like a waist to spend so much money and effort to make people immune but some folks just never want to play along.
It's the grown up version of when doctors used to give a kid a lollipop for getting his shots.That really would make be not want to take it. LOL I just figured if it is so beneficial then why cant it be your choice? In Philly they was offering Dunkin Donuts gift cards lol
View attachment 486725
The same faction that hates masks and forced social distancing are doing everything they can to ensure we will need it for the next few years
By refusing vaccines they will ensure that COVID has a population to spread among. Herd immunity will never happen and COVID is here to stay
It's the grown up version of when doctors used to give a kid a lollipop for getting his shots.That really would make be not want to take it. LOL I just figured if it is so beneficial then why cant it be your choice? In Philly they was offering Dunkin Donuts gift cards lol
View attachment 486725
My 25 year old daughter and her BF didn't wanna do it.
I offered a $50 Amazon gift card to each and they got their first Pfizer shot last week!
yea.....maybe we should allow millions of more to die before we trust the scienceView attachment 486713View attachment 486705So. . . your link says that they can still spread it. . . and?There has not been enough double blind testing to compare those who have been vaxed to those who have contracted the virus naturally and developed T-cell background immunity to make that statement.If you are vaxxed, you can still get it and spread it.As it won't harm them if they get it? They could just catch it and go on with their lives.Why NOT? We need to offer incentives for young people in the 16-28 range if we're going to reach the 65-70% range for herd immunity.
It won't harm MOST young people - All? Nope. And they can asymptomatic and spread it. Getting young people vaxed is essential to reach herd immunity.
And if you have no commodities? No, your effective rate at being hospitalized for this is zero.
Chances of a fully vaxed individual getting and spreading the COVIDS is minuscule.
Time for vaccine passports. If one is too much of a sceerdy cat to get poked, they don't deserve to attend sporting events and concerts ...
OR get on a plane!
You have no data to back up that statement. This is a position based on shareholder interests. . . and, quite frankly, an agenda.
Learn something
Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus?
You’ve been vaccinated; can you now safely see your friends and family? New research hints that vaccinated people may be less likely to transmit the coronavirus, but they are not 100% in the clear.theconversation.com
AND the possibility of this is slim. DERP
2. Does infection always mean transmission?
Transmission happens when enough viral particles from an infected person get into the body of an uninfected person. In theory, anyone infected with the coronavirus could potentially transmit it. But a vaccine will reduce the chance of this happening.
In general, if vaccination doesn’t completely prevent infection, it will significantly reduce the amount of virus coming out of your nose and mouth – a process called shedding – and shorten the time that you shed the virus. This is a big deal. A person who sheds less virus is less likely to transmit it to someone else.
This seems to be the case with coronavirus vaccines. In a recent preprint studywhich has yet to be peer reviewed, Israeli researchers tested 2,897 vaccinated people for signs of coronavirus infection. Most had no detectable virus, but people who were infected had one-quarter the amount of virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people tested at similar times post-infection.
Less coronavirus virus means less chance of spreading it, and if the amount of virus in your body is low enough, the probability of transmitting it may reach almost zero.
You're wasting my time with disinformation. Not sure where you get yours, but gotta be the same cesspool several others in USMB are getting theirs.
Vaccines are going up
Infections are going down
yea.....maybe we should allow millions of more to die before we trust the scienceView attachment 486713View attachment 486705So. . . your link says that they can still spread it. . . and?There has not been enough double blind testing to compare those who have been vaxed to those who have contracted the virus naturally and developed T-cell background immunity to make that statement.If you are vaxxed, you can still get it and spread it.As it won't harm them if they get it? They could just catch it and go on with their lives.Why NOT? We need to offer incentives for young people in the 16-28 range if we're going to reach the 65-70% range for herd immunity.
It won't harm MOST young people - All? Nope. And they can asymptomatic and spread it. Getting young people vaxed is essential to reach herd immunity.
And if you have no commodities? No, your effective rate at being hospitalized for this is zero.
Chances of a fully vaxed individual getting and spreading the COVIDS is minuscule.
Time for vaccine passports. If one is too much of a sceerdy cat to get poked, they don't deserve to attend sporting events and concerts ...
OR get on a plane!
You have no data to back up that statement. This is a position based on shareholder interests. . . and, quite frankly, an agenda.
Learn something
Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus?
You’ve been vaccinated; can you now safely see your friends and family? New research hints that vaccinated people may be less likely to transmit the coronavirus, but they are not 100% in the clear.theconversation.com
AND the possibility of this is slim. DERP
2. Does infection always mean transmission?
Transmission happens when enough viral particles from an infected person get into the body of an uninfected person. In theory, anyone infected with the coronavirus could potentially transmit it. But a vaccine will reduce the chance of this happening.
In general, if vaccination doesn’t completely prevent infection, it will significantly reduce the amount of virus coming out of your nose and mouth – a process called shedding – and shorten the time that you shed the virus. This is a big deal. A person who sheds less virus is less likely to transmit it to someone else.
This seems to be the case with coronavirus vaccines. In a recent preprint studywhich has yet to be peer reviewed, Israeli researchers tested 2,897 vaccinated people for signs of coronavirus infection. Most had no detectable virus, but people who were infected had one-quarter the amount of virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people tested at similar times post-infection.
Less coronavirus virus means less chance of spreading it, and if the amount of virus in your body is low enough, the probability of transmitting it may reach almost zero.
You're wasting my time with disinformation. Not sure where you get yours, but gotta be the same cesspool several others in USMB are getting theirs.
Vaccines are going up
Infections are going downLies, damned lies, and statistics - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Indeed Gomer!
Viruses do not exist on their own.The same faction that hates masks and forced social distancing are doing everything they can to ensure we will need it for the next few years
By refusing vaccines they will ensure that COVID has a population to spread among. Herd immunity will never happen and COVID is here to stay
Yessir - Whatever it takes to get to 200 million fully vaxed.
Anything short of that will result in variants ping-ponging amongst the youngsters putting us ALL at risk!
?yea.....maybe we should allow millions of more to die before we trust the scienceView attachment 486713View attachment 486705So. . . your link says that they can still spread it. . . and?There has not been enough double blind testing to compare those who have been vaxed to those who have contracted the virus naturally and developed T-cell background immunity to make that statement.If you are vaxxed, you can still get it and spread it.As it won't harm them if they get it? They could just catch it and go on with their lives.Why NOT? We need to offer incentives for young people in the 16-28 range if we're going to reach the 65-70% range for herd immunity.
It won't harm MOST young people - All? Nope. And they can asymptomatic and spread it. Getting young people vaxed is essential to reach herd immunity.
And if you have no commodities? No, your effective rate at being hospitalized for this is zero.
Chances of a fully vaxed individual getting and spreading the COVIDS is minuscule.
Time for vaccine passports. If one is too much of a sceerdy cat to get poked, they don't deserve to attend sporting events and concerts ...
OR get on a plane!
You have no data to back up that statement. This is a position based on shareholder interests. . . and, quite frankly, an agenda.
Learn something
Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus?
You’ve been vaccinated; can you now safely see your friends and family? New research hints that vaccinated people may be less likely to transmit the coronavirus, but they are not 100% in the clear.theconversation.com
AND the possibility of this is slim. DERP
2. Does infection always mean transmission?
Transmission happens when enough viral particles from an infected person get into the body of an uninfected person. In theory, anyone infected with the coronavirus could potentially transmit it. But a vaccine will reduce the chance of this happening.
In general, if vaccination doesn’t completely prevent infection, it will significantly reduce the amount of virus coming out of your nose and mouth – a process called shedding – and shorten the time that you shed the virus. This is a big deal. A person who sheds less virus is less likely to transmit it to someone else.
This seems to be the case with coronavirus vaccines. In a recent preprint studywhich has yet to be peer reviewed, Israeli researchers tested 2,897 vaccinated people for signs of coronavirus infection. Most had no detectable virus, but people who were infected had one-quarter the amount of virus in their bodies as unvaccinated people tested at similar times post-infection.
Less coronavirus virus means less chance of spreading it, and if the amount of virus in your body is low enough, the probability of transmitting it may reach almost zero.
You're wasting my time with disinformation. Not sure where you get yours, but gotta be the same cesspool several others in USMB are getting theirs.
Vaccines are going up
Infections are going downLies, damned lies, and statistics - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
It's the grown up version of when doctors used to give a kid a lollipop for getting his shots.That really would make be not want to take it. LOL I just figured if it is so beneficial then why cant it be your choice? In Philly they was offering Dunkin Donuts gift cards lol
View attachment 486725
My 25 year old daughter and her BF didn't wanna do it.
I offered a $50 Amazon gift card to each and they got their first Pfizer shot last week!