How it started vs how it’s going ... 🔥🔥🔥
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) November 30, 2022
🔊sound ...🧐🤣 pic.twitter.com/QZCY84VRRd
How it started vs how it’s going ... 🔥🔥🔥
— Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) November 30, 2022
🔊sound ...🧐🤣 pic.twitter.com/QZCY84VRRd
ramblin_ag02 said:
It's been pretty interesting to watch this unfold. The vaccine was perfectly matched to the original strain of COVID (alpha). That makes sense since it was designed based on alpha, and it exceeded everyone's expectations in that regard. They hit a home run.
Then the virus mutated and the major strain was delta. It had genetic changes compared to alpha, so the vaccine was no longer a perfect fit. The vaccine was still ok against delta, but not nearly as good as it was against alpha. Now the vaccine is hitting triples. Not as good, but no one every turns down a triple.
Delta faded and omicron came around with even more mutations. Now the vaccine was much less effective. If the vaccine worked as well (or a poorly) against the original strain as it did against omicron, then it probably wouldn't have been approved. This is also the point where the vaccine became pretty much useless at stopping person-to-person spread, and we started getting outbreaks among vaccinated people.
Since then we've had more omicron variants, like the BAs and the BQs. These were so far gone that the original vaccine probably isn't even worth getting anymore. Maybe for really old or really obese people, but maybe not even then.
I've been ranting since delta that we should be updating the vaccines every time we get a new dominant strain. mRNA is very easy to customize. As soon as you get the genetic sequence of a new strain, we could be making an updated vaccine for that strain. THey finally came out with an updated vaccine against omicron, and it's working really well. Luckily, the virus is also getting less and less lethal from delta onward with each new variant. So vaccination/lack of vaccination isn't having the profound effecti that it had with alpha and delta
Rocky Rider said:
Why would anyone push a vax using experimental technology (mRNA) to thwart a virus with a 99.5% survival rate?
The negatives related to this new technology far outweigh the positives.
I guess it's all a matter of perspective. Over a million people in the US died of COVID. The best estimate was that ~2.5 million would have died without the vaccines. Over 6.5 million people died worldwide with an estimate that an additional 20 million would have died without the vaccines.Rocky Rider said:
Why would anyone push a vax using experimental technology (mRNA) to thwart a virus with a 99.5% survival rate?
The negatives related to this new technology far outweigh the positives.
I was wrong about lockdowns and mandates. I was wrong and the reason I was wrong was my tribalism, my emotions, and my distorted understanding of human nature and of the virus. It doesn't matter much, but I wanted to apologize for being wrong.
— Kevin Bass (@kevinnbass) December 13, 2022
ramblin_ag02 said:I guess it's all a matter of perspective. Over a million people in the US died of COVID. The best estimate was that ~2.5 million would have died without the vaccines. Over 6.5 million people died worldwide with an estimate that an additional 20 million would have died without the vaccines.Rocky Rider said:
Why would anyone push a vax using experimental technology (mRNA) to thwart a virus with a 99.5% survival rate?
The negatives related to this new technology far outweigh the positives.
What's your threshold for lives saved before we use something experimental? 1,000? 1,000,000? 1,000,000,000? If you're not going to pull out all the stops for a once a century pandemic, then when would you? The polio vaccine was experimental when it came out. Polio has a survival rate of ~99.925%, and rate of paralysis of 0.5%. So 99.5% of people recover from polio without any issues at all. Where we wrong to push the polio vaccine?