chainbreak
Banned
To hell with all the conspiracy theories. It's just a vaccine. It's really not that much different than a vaccine against polio, chicken pox, small pox, measles, mumps, whooping cough or anything else people may have been vaccinated against. And though it may not have been studied as much as some like, all the necessary statistics are in. The vaccine works! At least a couple of the vaccines are over 90% effective.
The only way were are going to be able to beat the coronavirus is to get everybody vaccinated. Though for many, I guess the coronavirus isn't deadly enough. But 700k to over 900k dead in the U.S. from it so far is deadly enough for me. It is also far deadlier than the flu. Back in 1918-1919, over 600,000 people died in the U.S. from the "Spanish" flu. And our population was only about one third of what it is today. Also, medical technology wasn't nearly as advanced back then as it is now. If they had the coronavirus going around back then instead of the Spanish flu, I wouldn't doubt if the death toll would have been in the many millions.
Also, the coronavirus is much more contagious than the flu. I have been hearing that cases of the flu went way down compared to what they usually are. That is because people were protecting themselves against the coronavirus. But though flu cases went down, coronavirus cases didn't. Though from what I hear they are starting to go down now. That is because so many people have been vaccinated. But all that is no reason for the unvaccinated to remain unvaccinated. To me, it is a patriotic duty to get vaccinated.
https://www.npr.org/sections/corona...n-900-000-people-have-died-of-covid-19-in-u-s
The only way were are going to be able to beat the coronavirus is to get everybody vaccinated. Though for many, I guess the coronavirus isn't deadly enough. But 700k to over 900k dead in the U.S. from it so far is deadly enough for me. It is also far deadlier than the flu. Back in 1918-1919, over 600,000 people died in the U.S. from the "Spanish" flu. And our population was only about one third of what it is today. Also, medical technology wasn't nearly as advanced back then as it is now. If they had the coronavirus going around back then instead of the Spanish flu, I wouldn't doubt if the death toll would have been in the many millions.
Also, the coronavirus is much more contagious than the flu. I have been hearing that cases of the flu went way down compared to what they usually are. That is because people were protecting themselves against the coronavirus. But though flu cases went down, coronavirus cases didn't. Though from what I hear they are starting to go down now. That is because so many people have been vaccinated. But all that is no reason for the unvaccinated to remain unvaccinated. To me, it is a patriotic duty to get vaccinated.
https://www.npr.org/sections/corona...n-900-000-people-have-died-of-covid-19-in-u-s
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