DioNoZeus said:Yes, I understand what a boarder state is. How many people in this current outbreak or in the Disneyland outbreak in California in 2014-15 are/were illegal?Harrison Bergeron said:DioNoZeus said:What does being a border state have to do with anything. We are talking about outbreaks among Americans. Again, if enough citizens are vaccinated, everyone would be protected by herd immunity. Even if the boarder is shut down completely, outbreaks can still occur if Americans who travel abroad who aren't vaccinated bring it back to communities that are under vaccinated.Harrison Bergeron said:DioNoZeus said:You aren't protected by the herd if too many people aren't vaccinated, hence the outbreaks here.TinFoilHatPreacherBear said:DioNoZeus said:You conveniently left out the vaccine hesitant people…Redbrickbear said:DioNoZeus said:We also haven't had a case of polio in the US since 1979 because of vaccination.Redbrickbear said:DioNoZeus said:Smallpox says helloShooterTX said:
The real crime was the idiots who declared it eradicated in 2000.
There have been cases in America almost every year since then.
No disease will ever be truly eradicated via vaccines... it's impossible.
I'm sure the proclamation was politically motivated. They knew cases would occur, so they just wanted to beat the Amish types over the head with the "you brought it back" nonsense.
Interesting the only one we were ever successful at eradicating as a species
[last naturally occurring case was diagnosed in October 1977, and the World Health Organization (WHO) certified the global eradication of the disease in 1980, making smallpox the only human disease to have been eradicated to date.]Smallpox was in the human population for ~10,000 years...it never mutated to a lesser form.
— Radical Centrist,wrathful tantric deity🇺🇦🇹🇼🎗️ (@RadCentrism) September 24, 2021
It killed 300+ million people in the 20th century alone.
Although this outbreak in Texas primarily involves a religious community that refuses vaccination, there have been other outbreaks in communities with high rates of vaccine hesitancy (for example, the outbreak in Southern California in 2014-15 linked to Disneyland):
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6406a5.htm/mm6406a5.htm
Although cases typically originate from immigrants who are exposed abroad and bring the virus to the US, if enough people are vaccinated here to maintain herd immunity, we wouldn't have outbreaks and it would remain eradicated in the US.
So….3rd world immigrants and strange outside the mainstream religious groups (Mennonites, Amish, Hasidic Jews)
Doing the job of keeping contagious diseases going that normal Americans won't….
Valley hesitant people are protected by the herd.
Real issue is that we keep letting un vaxxed people into our country. Close the borders. Only come in with a passport and up to date shots.
https://www.yalemedicine.org/news/measles-outbreak
That's because we're a border state Einstein.
A border state means the star is on the border. Texas is a border state. It is on the southern border of the United Staes. Millions of illegal aliens crosses into the United States from the southern border. Many of these were unvaccinated children. Because of proximity (that means "close to") many illegal immigrants settle in border states. Illegals spread disease because they're not vaccinated..
The Disneyland outbreak likely was caused by looney California granolas - it's been memory-holed that Democrats were anti-vax before Trump's vaccines in 2020 led by the crazy Jenny McCarthy and others. There was a huge anti-Big Pharma, anti-vax movement in the 2010s where parents were not getting there kids vaccinated due to the autism concern. It's been memory-holed and the regressives created this bogeyman of all of these anti-vax Trump supporters (missing the irony Trump facilitated the vaccine development).
Yes, illegals are driving the outbreakss:
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/wr/mm7319a1.htm