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originally posted by: ufoorbhunter
a reply to: HawkEyi
Figures in Israel will never match 'standard' figures in the rest of the world. You get normal secular society then you get the Haredim who are a law to themselves and follow their own rules on keeping a (non) safe distance etc
originally posted by: TheLead
So the vaccine is essentially God to you?
You can't know it's the vaccine or pre-exposure that has helped build immunity due our health professionals not recommending an anti-body before vaccination, but it has to mean the vaccine is working.
originally posted by: Nexttimemaybe
They have a very low death rate, so all seems to be working.
With that many people having some level of immunity against the virus, Israel is in the midst of THE largest spike of infections since the start of the pandemic last year.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
What I see as good news, though, is that those who are having breakthrough infections will, in my layman's mind, now have some sort of natural immunity in their body, which is showing to be more robust and longer-lasting than the vaccine-induced immunity. So, I guess there's that.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
So, just out of curiosity, is stopping the spread no longer a viable goal, so we've moved the goalposts to, "Yeah, but did they die?"
Yahoo
BIDEN: “If you’re vaccinated, you’re not going to be hospitalized, you’re not going to be in the IC unit, and you’re not going to die.”
BIDEN: “You’re not going to get COVID if you have these vaccinations.”
BIDEN, asked about vaccinated people who get infected: “It may be possible, I know of none where they’re hospitalized, in ICU and or have passed away so at a minimum I can say even if they did contract it, which I’m sorry they did, it’s such a tiny percentage and it’s not life threatening.”
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
I know that we don't need to do this dance again, but how you describe it is not how it was sold to the general public. Yes, there is evidence directly attributed to the vaccine as reducing symptoms and death, but natural immunity does that as well, as do the variants with less-deadly and lower symptoms that are currently driving the latest surge.
I don't attribute it all to natural immunity, either, but since it's proven to be more robust and longer-lasting, it's definitely a factor when the vaccine is showing to be less and less effective at reducing the spread of the virus. And I really do think that the reducing number of those readily susceptible to death from COVID is also a big driving factor in the reducing mortality rate of this current surge.
But just for fun and others to read
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
I think that people who are distrusting/skeptical of the vaccine have very logical and scientific reasons to be. Yes, some--maybe many--are acting that way based on the politicization of the whole COVID issue, but there certainly is not a lack of scholarly articles and peer-reviewed white papers that raise legitimate questions about the vaccine. Couple that with how we should be able to choose, across the board, what goes into our bodies, and there are certainly valid concerns with the vaccines and surrounding issues (mandates, lockdowns, demonizing, polarization, discrimination, etc.)
The thing is, I think that you and I tend to agree more on the big things than disagree, that's why I tend to get into the weeds a little more with you. Hopefully you don't mind too much, even if it can get a little testy at times.
originally posted by: SlapMonkey
I'm talking somewhat in absolutes because almost across the board (from what I've seen, any how), the newest data is aligning with what I'm claiming, and from multiple sources, but it's only happening recently because the question of natural-versus-vaccinated immunity wasn't being properly investigated in the first year or so of the pandemic. Sure, it might all be wrong, but I'm going to run with it as it is for now, and address and changes to the findings if and when they come in.
But I do agree that we will eventually have a very solid understanding, but I don't see that for about the next two years since variants and all of that is changing so fast.