whiterock said:
D. C. Bear said:
Mothra said:
Ghostrider said:
D. C. Bear said:
Ghostrider said:
whiterock said:
Mothra said:
D. C. Bear said:
Mothra said:
Sam Lowry said:
Mothra said:
D. C. Bear said:
Mothra said:
The Harvard article certainly supports my statement:
"The results of this study, reported in the journal Cell, indicate that traditional dosing regimens of COVID-19 vaccines available in the United States do not produce antibodies capable of recognizing and neutralizing the Omicron variant."
The second article calls into question whether the booster has any effect and concluded it does not.
The first article concluded that the booster did have an effect.
"We detected very little neutralization of the Omicron variant pseudovirus when we used samples taken from people who were recently vaccinated with two doses of mRNA vaccine or one dose of Johnson & Johnson," says Balazs. "But individuals who received three doses of mRNA vaccine had very significant neutralization against the Omicron variant."
Did you read the whole article?
Of course, this is also a lab based study that, according to the article, looked at antibody response. It did not mention any other parts of the immune system.
Against severe disease. Not against transmission, which if you will read my post, is what I stated.
And now you're just making stuff up.
I'm sure the irony of this statement is lost on you.
Does the article I posted show that traditional dosing regimens of COVID-19 vaccines available in the United States produce antibodies capable of recognizing and neutralizing the Omicron variant or not?
Does that same study find significant neutralizing antibodies following a booster? (Yes, it does, which would make your claim that the vaccines do "literally nothing" to stop transmission rather dubious if one assumed that the presence of neutralizing antibodies would lessen transmission, which appears to be an assumption you have made by claiming that the absence of neutralizing antibodies is conclusive evidence that the vaccines do not provide any protection against infection).
It's only dubious to those who can't read. The article I quoted says the COVID-19 vaccines available in the United States do not produce antibodies capable of recognizing and neutralizing the Omicron variant. It appears there is conflicting data on whether the boosters are capable of doing so.
From yesterday:
https://fee.org/articles/cdc-natural-immunity-offered-stronger-protection-against-covid-than-vaccines-during-delta-wave/
Vaccines are very good protection against infection for about 6-8 months, at which time data show they clearly become a liability against infection. They do continue to provide improved outcomes against serious disease.
DC chooses to maintain laser focus on the 2nd sentence, and studiously ignores the 1st.
I know many people who got Covid 2x. Natural immunity doesn't do much either. We are f'd until a better vaccine come out.
Except that second infections, like infections among vaccinated individuals, tend not to have anything near the level of seriousness of first infections of unvaccinated individuals.
Well my friends now that got it 6 mos ago have it much worse than the first time. They are both unvaccinated.
Like you, getting vaccinated is a no brainer imo.
Published studies out in the last few days show that natural immunity is superior to any protection afforded by the vaccine. It is one of the reasons why countries are starting to ease vaccine and mask mandates.
Of course, my doctor has been saying this from the very beginning.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/natural-immunity-was-more-potent-than-vaccines-during-us-delta-wave-study/
https://www.euronews.com/next/2022/01/20/natural-immunity-against-covid-lowered-risk-more-than-vaccines-against-delta-variant-new-s
When you are dealing with a virus that mutates constantly, vaccines will become outdated pretty quickly.
Infection acquired immunity may be superior to vaccine acquired immunity after you have been infected and recovered. However, vaccine acquired immunity orders of magnitude better before your have been infected and, if you should happen to get infected after vaccination, you are orders of magnitude less likely to become seriously ill or die than if you get and initial infection without being vaccinated.
Omicron undermines the materiality of your valid point, which still ignores the long-term consequences of the vaccines - higher rates of infections, which is being used as the primary justification for sovereign power intervention in the economy.
The more people we vaccinate, the greater number of cases we will have, long term.
What a great way to keep the pandemic (and all the govt controls which attend it) alive.
Omicron does not undermine anything I have said.
You want things to be true that are not really supported by data because you don't like the "government intervention." I don't like the "government intervention," either, but I don't think the "government intervention" is justified by by what the data do support, and it would take something much, much greater to actually justify intervention of that kind,
You are going to need to show some proof that vaccines "lead to higher infection rates."
Also consider that if "everybody gets it," (in the long term) we are going to have the same number of cases eventually. However, with vaccines we are going to have many fewer serious cases and deaths from the virus and delaying cases provides more time for better therapeutics to be developed.