So why did you keep asking me for CDC data when you knew "the whole fucking time" the data I quoted was from the UK as I made that clear from the beginning. Shouldn't you be looking up the CDC data own your own, if that's what you're after? But of course the number on unvaccinated dying due to the Covid virus has not "always been [close to zero]," even if "...you [aren't] old, sick and fat." The Covid death rate has only dropped from it's peak because too many of the most susceptible have already died, and treatment has been markedly advanced. Most importantly, however, in some countries the number vaccinated is now thankfully larger then the number unvaccinated, reducing the the rate of transmission to the unvaccinated. Sad to say that in countries where vaccination is free, and freely available, those who are unvaccinated are free riders on the rest of us. If these free riders are healthy adults eligible for vaccination they don't deserve to be spared. Nevertheless many will be, only because of the good sense of the rest of us. If you'll think more deeply about your remarks you might realize they exist in a vacuum ignorant of the primary thrust of medicine throughout mankind's history on Earth, which has been, and is still, the quest for increased longevity.
Because In post 33 you said: “ I said "very close to 0%" of double vaccinated in the U.S. end up dying from Covid. This is based on U.S. data” SHOW THE FUCKING US DATA. Jesus H Fucking Christ you would think these people who believe they are so fucking smart could just meander through their own lies at a reasonable rate. Between pie and GWB it’s just lies and stupidity masquerading as intellectualism and science.
So you admit you are a complete and total liar? @jem and many others have blasted you for ages because of your lies. You pull shit out of midair and then just walk away. Your entire covid fear porn mural and the vax church your worship is crumbling at your feet.
Here you go Sweetheart. Here is some U.S. data as of ~ June 21 (can't say how reliable) It is from CDC see https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/covid-19/health-departments/breakthrough-cases.html ((791 U.S. deaths among fully vaccinated)/(>159 Million fully vaccinated)) x 100 = 0.0005% I leave it up to you if that's close to 0% or not. P.S. I went ahead and signed you up to receive my Fan Clubs newsletter. Hope you don't mind.
Not sure why the pro-vaxxers are always condemning the anti-vaxxers for not taking the vaccine. Shouldn't they be happy because sooner or later the anti-vaxxers will die? Not sure why the vaxxers are so scared of anti-vaxxers? Aren't they protected after taking the experimental vaccine? Things to ponder. Strange.
Frustrated that you are incapable of answering a basic quiz, eh? Yeah, we get it now you feel the need to lash out at those who actually provide the facts rather than all the anti-vax COVID-denier nonsense you regularly spew. SAD.
The majority of COVID cases in Singapore are vaccinated breakthrough cases; a large majority of their population is vaccinated so this is not surprising. What is important and should be noted -- is that very few (in this case none) of the vaccinated who catch COVID fall severely ill -- their cases are very minor. Vaccinated people make up 75% of recent COVID-19 cases in Singapore, but few fall ill https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-...ee-quarters-recent-covid-19-cases-2021-07-23/ Vaccinated individuals accounted for three-quarters of Singapore's COVID-19 infections in the last four weeks, but they were not falling seriously ill, government data showed, as a rapid ramp-up in inoculations leaves fewer people unvaccinated. While the data shows that vaccines are highly effective in preventing severe cases, it also underscores the risk that even those inoculated could be contagious, so that inoculation alone may not suffice to halt transmission. Of Singapore's 1,096 locally transmitted infections in the last 28 days, 484, or about 44%, were in fully vaccinated people, while 30% were partially vaccinated and just over 25% were unvaccinated, Thursday's data showed. While seven cases of serious illness required oxygen, and another was in critical condition in intensive care, none of the eight had been fully vaccinated, the health ministry said. "There is continuing evidence that vaccination helps to prevent serious disease when one gets infected," the ministry said, adding that all the fully vaccinated and infected people had shown no symptoms, or only mild ones. Infections in vaccinated people do not mean vaccines are ineffective, experts said. "As more and more people are vaccinated in Singapore, we will see more infections happening among vaccinated people," Teo Yik Ying, dean of the Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health at the National University of Singapore (NUS). "It is important to always compare it against the proportion of people who remain unvaccinated...Suppose Singapore achieves a rate of 100% fully vaccinated...then all infections will stem from the vaccinated people and none from the unvaccinated." Singapore has already inoculated nearly 75% of its 5.7 million people, the world's second highest after the United Arab Emirates, a Reuters tracker shows, and half its population is fully vaccinated. As countries with advanced vaccination campaigns prepare to live with COVID-19 as an endemic disease, their focus is turning to preventing death and serious diseases through vaccination. But they are grappling with how to differentiate public health policies, such as mask wearing, between the vaccinated and those who are not. Both Singapore and Israel, for example, reinstated some curbs recently to battle a surge in infections driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, while England lifted almost all restrictions this week, despite high caseloads. "We've got to accept that all of us will have to have some restrictions, vaccinated or not vaccinated," said Peter Collignon, an infectious diseases physician and microbiologist at Canberra Hospital in the Australian capital. "It's just the restrictions are likely to be higher for those unvaccinated than vaccinated people, but that may still mean they have mask mandates indoors, for instance." The Singapore data also showed that infections in the last 14 days among vaccinated people older than 61 stood at about 88%, higher than the figure of just over 70% for the younger group. Linfa Wang, a professor at Duke-NUS Medical School, said elderly people had been shown to have weaker immune responses upon vaccination. In Israel, which also has a high vaccination rate, about half of the 46 patients hospitalised in severe condition by early July had been vaccinated, and the majority were from risk groups, authorities said. read more It was not immediately clear if the Singapore data reflected reduced protection offered by vaccines against the Delta variant, the most common form in the wealthy city state in recent months. Two doses of vaccine from Pfizer (PFE.N) -BioNTech (22UAy.DE) or AstraZeneca (AZN.L)are nearly as effective against Delta. a as against the previously dominant Alpha variant, according to a study published this week. read more Singapore uses the Pfizer and Moderna (MRNA.O) vaccines in its national vaccination programme. Friday's 130 new locally-transmitted infections were off this week's 11-month high. The recent rise in cases prompted authorities to tighten curbs on social gatherings in the push to boost vaccinations, particularly among the elderly. read more
I did these tests. Exactly what degree did you achieve in university? You can’t even answer that one. Maybe J&J only hires home builders wives?