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54

Uh oh, they lost Timmy,

submitted by ParnellsUprising to Covid1984 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 11:33:57 ago (+54/-0)     (files.catbox.moe)

https://files.catbox.moe/o9txq0.png



16 comments block


[ - ] Cantaloupe 8 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 11:52:07 ago (+9/-1)*

Partly because of ADE. Goolge Faceberg, hid this from people. The shot ruins your immune system. The immune system is supposed to be a jack-of-all-trades, a relatively weaker general responder, now though thanks to the shot it only works on one thing - it's "autistic".
But that's not all... like Trojan horse the antibodies allegedly ferry new viral strains right into cells.

Just Google to find the details or share it on FB - oh wait you cannot /s

[ - ] ParnellsUprising [op] 4 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 11:55:57 ago (+5/-1)

[ - ] NigsGonnaNog 5 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 13:52:54 ago (+5/-0)

Encouraging the virus to mutate by creating evolutionary pressure for more severe symptoms by creating an 'imperfect' vaccine that only suppresses symptoms but still allows infection and transmission was always part of the plan. That way, they can keep the hoax going with limitless variants and blame it on the anti-vaxxers when deadlier and more infectious variants pop up.

Anybody with above room temperature IQ can do 3 minutes of research and find out about the case 2 decades ago with the bird disease where they did a 100% vaccination rate with a leaky vaccine, which caused a deathly new variant to develop. Anybody with even a slight understanding of evolutionary biology would be able to deduce that this would happen by using reason and logic, without even looking up the actual case studies. Viruses always evolve to maximize transmission and minimize lethality, striking a dynamic balance, since increasing transmission usually increases symptoms and therefore increases lethality. If you create an environment with leaky vaccines that reduces symptoms and therefore both the transmission and the lethality, then the virus will mutate until it is at the old balance level, but now with the vaccine. Meaning that without the vaccine, it is absolutely lethal and much more dangerous than before.

It really goes to show how retarded the average person is that they buy the 'un-vaxxed folks cause mutations' lie that the establishment is selling.

Wonder if the vaccines are too shitty, though. You need an imperfect vaccine that's actually good at suppressing symptoms to allow deadlier variants to develop. That's assuming covid is actually a real thing and not just a re-branding of the flu. Well, if covid is actually real and deadly mutations won't happen naturally, they'll just unleash a strand of the virus from one of their 'gain-of-function' laboratories.

[ - ] Love240 1 point 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 21:45:18 ago (+1/-0)

It IS the flu. And that IS what the flu does. Everyone lost their damned minds and forgot basic stuff like that. A good indicator this 'shot' wasn't going to work are the 'flu vaccines' of yesteryears. Which don't work (according to their professed official goals), and upon honest examination, show the same thing we're seeing in this iteration of mass murder.

Nobody wants to talk about them using AI (that is a computer model, not an actual isolated virus because they never isolated it) to try to predict what the next year flu strain is going to be for years. AND IT DIDN'T WORK. And yet, they continue forward. Hm.. sound familiar? coughimmigrationcough (not doing that for all their bullshit or I'd coof to death)

[ - ] yesiknow 0 points 2.8 yearsAug 1, 2021 00:29:59 ago (+0/-0)

How dare you insinuate "those people" don't have intricate and infallible knowledge about immune systems and the entire genetic code and the balances of the human system. If you don't put them on equal footing with God, you are an antisemite and will pay for that.

[ - ] lord_nougat 5 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 12:35:41 ago (+5/-0)

Timmay!

[ - ] totalniggerdeath 2 points 2.8 yearsAug 1, 2021 01:06:59 ago (+2/-0)

Guaranteed this fucking faggot leftist still supports mandatory untested gene therapy.

[ - ] kishind 2 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 14:20:51 ago (+2/-0)

If you interpret the government's behavior as trying to maximize harm from a relatively harmless disease, it makes almost complete sense, every step of the way.

If you listen to the government (or Big Pharma's news division) about their intentions, it will seem incompetent and confusing and frustrating. It's not any of those things, it's just treating human lives as having equal value to ants'. The kind of evil normal folks have trouble even comprehending.

[ - ] deleted 1 point 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 12:35:39 ago (+2/-1)

deleted

[ - ] kishind 2 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 14:23:25 ago (+2/-0)

Nope. He's a permanent freedom-leaning leftcuck. He will never recognize the need for white male unity to completely take over this country.

[ - ] deleted 3 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 14:43:48 ago (+3/-0)

deleted

[ - ] observation1 0 points 2.8 yearsAug 1, 2021 00:56:25 ago (+0/-0)

CDC study shows three-fourths of people infected in Massachusetts coronavirus outbreak were vaccinated but few required hospitalization
By Carolyn Y. Johnson, Yasmeen Abutaleb and Joel Achenbach 7/30/21 at 6:35 p.m. EDT
10-13 minutes

A sobering scientific analysis published Friday found that three-quarters of the people infected during an explosive coronavirus outbreak fueled by the delta variant were fully vaccinated. The report on the Massachusetts cases, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, offers key evidence bolstering the hypothesis that vaccinated people can spread the more transmissible variant and may be a factor in the summer surge of infections.

Critically, the study found that vaccinated individuals carried as much virus in their noses as unvaccinated individuals, strongly suggesting that vaccinated people could spread the virus to others. The CDC was criticized this week for changing its mask guidance without publishing the data it relied on. The report released Friday contains some of that data.

“This finding is concerning and was a pivotal discovery leading to CDC’s updated mask recommendation,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in a statement. “The masking recommendation was updated to ensure the vaccinated public would not unknowingly transmit virus to others, including their unvaccinated or immunocompromised loved ones.”

The outbreak started in early July in Provincetown, at the tip of Cape Cod, a tourist destination known for its party scene. The July Fourth holiday atmosphere proved ideal for superspreader events.

The new research and the reversal in the masking guidance put the public in an uncertain position as August and a new school year approaches. Risk calculations have never been easy in this pandemic, and the viral environment just got murkier.
Some people are catching coronavirus after being vaccinated. Johns Hopkins University infectious disease expert Lisa Maragakis gives advice on how to stay safe. (John Farrell/The Washington Post)

Scientists said the Provincetown outbreak and other recent data on breakthrough infections make clear that vaccines offer significant protection, as they were designed to, against severe illness and death but do not offer blanket protection against any chance of infection. Only a handful of people in the outbreak were hospitalized. While the data suggests that vaccinated people can spread the disease, the extent to which they contribute is not yet clear. Walensky said this week that such transmission occurs on “rare occasions.”

A CDC internal document obtained by The Washington Post estimated that 35,000 vaccinated people a week in the United States are having symptomatic breakthrough infections, out of a vaccinated population of more than 162 million. Vaccination coverage is higher than average in Massachusetts, with nearly 70 percent of residents fully vaccinated.

“This shows the delta is formidable,” said Larry Corey, a virologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. “We can’t take one report of packed bars and extrapolate and say the sky is falling. The sky is not falling. But it does say the vaccine is not infallible.”

“Common sense has to be used,” Corey said. “It’s a learning moment. It’s a teaching moment. You can’t overlook the vast data we have on the effectiveness of the vaccine.”

Corey and other scientists reiterated that vaccination is the best way to end the pandemic. Turning covid-19 into a nuisance cold instead of a potentially fatal pneumonia was the main goal of the shots.

“People should be reassured that if they are fully vaccinated that they are very likely, highly likely, to be protected against severe or critical illness, the kind of illness that would cause them to be hospitalized or killed by this virus,” said Paul A. Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. “Vaccines save your life.”

But the CDC has been grappling with how to communicate to the public about infections able to break through vaccine’s protection, acknowledging they happen more frequently than many people anticipated, although illness tends to be mild. The study’s authors note that Massachusetts has a high vaccination rate and yet the virus was still able to spread.

“Findings from this investigation suggest that even jurisdictions without substantial or high COVID-19 transmission might consider expanding prevention strategies, including masking in indoor public settings regardless of vaccination status,” they write.

Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, noted that the new CDC guidance on indoor masking for vaccinated people applies to communities with substantial transmission. That criterion would not have included Provincetown, which, according to the CDC report, had no reported new cases on July 3.

“What this tells us is we need much more context and better data to guide whether and when vaccinated people should wear masks, because following CDC’s new guidance wouldn’t have stopped this outbreak from occurring,” Nuzzo said.

Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, warned that these flare-ups of infections could become a persistent challenge as people move around, even to highly vaccinated areas.

“Everyone was looking forward to a fun, vaccinated summer,” Dean said. “Unfortunately, with the delta variant, we are having to recalibrate what we can do and still keep people safe. This outbreak happened despite highly effective vaccines.”

The internal CDC document, which The Post published Thursday, states that the delta variant is as transmissible as chickenpox and is likely to cause more-severe infections than past variants. That document also shows the CDC believes it needs to revamp its public communications strategy to stress the importance of vaccinations as the best way to crush the pandemic while acknowledging that breakthrough infections are more common than top health officials have indicated.

The Provincetown outbreak has all the hallmarks of a superspreader event, with infected people reporting to public health officials that they gathered in “densely packed indoor and outdoor events that included bars, restaurants, guest houses and rental homes,” according to Friday’s CDC report. The full outbreak, which began over the July Fourth holiday weekend, is close to 900 cases, but the analysis included only a subset of 469 cases.

About three-quarters of infections occurred in people who were fully vaccinated, and that group had received Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines.

Scientists at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, a research institute in Cambridge, Mass., that was involved in the genetic analysis of the outbreak, highlighted that this was not a single event. At least five events sparked the outbreak, so it is not possible to blame it on one party or one bar.

“There’s no one person or spot to blame here,” said Daniel Park, group leader for viral computational genomics at the Broad Institute. “The thing that’s catching the attention in national public health is that … a decently high vaccination rate isn’t quite enough” to stop an outbreak with so people in one place and the delta variant spreading.

The scientists, along with officials at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, reported that 79 percent of the breakthrough infections were symptomatic. Four of five people who were hospitalized were fully vaccinated.

They are now analyzing the genetic fingerprints of the virus samples taken to trace chains of transmission and determine how commonly fully vaccinated people were infecting one another. The presence of similar amounts of virus in the noses of vaccinated and unvaccinated people raises the possibility they are both contributing to spread, but many scientists think that vaccinated people should be less likely to spread the virus.

Similar findings may be emerging from other locations. The internal CDC document showed that national surveillance found that vaccinated people had larger amounts of virus in their nose when infected with the delta variant, compared with other variants.

A report of cases from mid-July in Dane County, Wis., found a similar result, showing that fully vaccinated people had viral loads similar to those of unvaccinated people “and may be more capable of spreading COVID than was previously known.” The Wisconsin data showed that unvaccinated people were twice as likely to be infected as fully vaccinated people.

The CDC study “raises the very worrisome possibility that high viral loads can occur in people who have delta, and this is a fundamental as we have to approach the fall and winter,” said David O’Connor, a professor of pathology and laboratory medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

While vaccines remain highly protective against the worst outcomes, the new data may have implications for herd immunity, the threshold at which there is enough immunity to stifle community spread.

“Although most cases were not hospitalized, thus showing the vaccine works in an important way, this study is portentous for the achievement of herd immunity,” Andrew Noymer, an epidemiologist at the University of California at Irvine, said in an email. “If the vaccinated can become infected (and, we believe, from other studies, potentially spread covid), then herd immunity becomes more of a mirage than oasis.”

It also may intensify the debate about when and how long to implement mask guidance. The new study, as well as the internal CDC document obtained by The Post, both suggested that universal masking may be necessary to help stop spread of the virus. But the mask guidance issued this week said only that people need to use masks under certain circumstances, including high levels of virus in the community.

“We are at an inflection point,” said Pardis Sabeti, a geneticist at the Broad Institute and Harvard University. “I’d say we are in a moment right now — a crossroads, a fork in the road where we can either try and take a road to end the pandemic or take a path that will prolong it.”

The study makes clear that vaccines offer significant protection but do not prevent infection entirely, even among the fully vaccinated. On July 3, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported a 14-day average of zero coronavirus cases per 100,000 in Barnstable County. By July 17, that number had increased to 177 cases per 100,000.

“This report demonstrates that vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 is not perfect, particularly in a setting with a highly contagious variant, in a large group in close contact, even if most are vaccinated against the virus,” said Gregg Gonsalves, associate professor at the Yale School of Public Health. “The good news here: If you’re vaccinated, refrain from large group gatherings and mask up, chances are good you’ll be okay. This is not 2020. But we’re not out of the woods.”

[ - ] account deleted by user 0 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 15:31:32 ago (+0/-0)*

account deleted by user

[ - ] SmellsLikeTacos -1 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 17:55:18 ago (+0/-1)

Hydroclorquine shit... ???
With zitheomicein.. ???
Fuck all their shit.

[ - ] deleted -1 points 2.8 yearsJul 31, 2021 17:22:13 ago (+0/-1)

deleted