Quote (SylvesterStallone @ Aug 9 2021 10:28am)
Covid vaccine doeant KILL the virus, it makes it easier for your body to handle it. You can still be positive or give virus to other person.
Nothing new, we already saw this numerous times.
The thing no1 talks about, is virus mutations in vaccinated organism that can handle the virus, but cant kill it.
And for that, thor12345 might have better knowledge. So he would probably confirm that this is what causes horrible mutations and eventually kills both unvaccinated rd and vaccinated people.
So to get to a conclusion, in the long run,vaccinated ppl are doing more damage to society than unvaccinated.
Not sure about this, but it's a valid point that i haven't seen a single news article bring up. What happens when the virus mutates and becomes a super virus resistant to all vaccines?
Interesting article back from 2018 on this.
Quote
Most people have heard of antibiotic resistance. Vaccine resistance, not so much. That’s because drug resistance is a huge global problem that annually kills nearly 25,000 people in the United States and in Europe, and more than twice that many in India. Microbes resistant to vaccines, on the other hand, aren’t a major menace. Perhaps they never will be: Vaccine programs around the globe have been and continue to be immensely successful at preventing infections and saving lives.
Recent research suggests, however, that some pathogen populations are adapting in ways that help them survive in a vaccinated world, and that these changes come about in a variety of ways. Just as the mammal population exploded after dinosaurs went extinct because a big niche opened up for them, some microbes have swept in to take the place of competitors eliminated by vaccines.
Immunization is also making once-rare or nonexistent genetic variants of pathogens more prevalent, presumably because vaccine-primed antibodies can’t as easily recognize and attack shape-shifters that look different from vaccine strains. And vaccines being developed against some of the world’s wilier pathogens — malaria, HIV, anthrax — are based on strategies that could, according to evolutionary models and lab experiments, encourage pathogens to become even more dangerous.
https://www.quantamagazine.org/how-vaccines-can-drive-pathogens-to-evolve-20180510/This post was edited by ofthevoid on Aug 9 2021 08:34am