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originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: carewemust
You are...let's just say, mistaken. And it is now September.
The media and governor were freaking out over 19 infections in a single day
originally posted by: carewemust
But the protection they offer gradually wanes over time.
originally posted by: Phage
a reply to: carewemust
Is this not true as well with "natural" immunity?
Based on how a Covid-19 vaccine's protection begins declining almost immediately, what concerns you the most?
originally posted by: Nexttimemaybe
I will just get a booster if a d when according to medical advice. It feels great not having to be scared of covid and knowing I am protected against the worse of it.
It must be horrible living your life being scared of a vaccine, I feel for those people.
originally posted by: Phage
You know where I live.
Look it up.
originally posted by: nonspecific
I'm not concerned in the slightest.
Here in the UK over 80 percent of over 16s are vaccinated and the numbers still going up.
I'll take the booster shots and along with the rest of the vaccinated we shall hopefully as planned get through the winter with the minimum number of serious hospitalisations and deaths and with what is now planned to he no vaccine passports or further lockdowns.
From what I understand there's enough vaccination and awareness of the reality of covid 19 that those measures being implemented in other countries like mandatory vaccinations and further social restrictions will not be necessary.
The futures not looking as bad here as it is elsewhere by the looks of things.
a reply to: carewemust
SINGAPORE, Sept 13 (Reuters) - The rapid pace of new COVID-19 infections and a doubling of seriously ill patients in Singapore have raised unexpected hurdles to reopening plans for the vaccination frontrunner, where 81% of the population is fully vaccinated.
Singapore, one of the fastest in the world to reach that level, has seen its inoculation rates plateau, and this month paused its gradual reopening plans, spooked by daily infections that returned to one-year peaks this month.
Infections over the weekend were more than a combined 1,000 cases, a tenfold increase from a month ago. Many experts, though, are not overly concerned about the rise in infections because of the low number of serious cases and Singapore's high vaccination percentage....
originally posted by: BlackArrow
a reply to: Phage
No its not true with natural immunity. Natural immunity still remains very high months later while the shots weaken. They just quit broadcasting that fact to support the push of vaccines due tot he billions of tax payer dollars spent on it... which were only ment to slow the spread.. Those people will indeed get covid eventually. Just depends on when.