D2Cat
Well-known member
Listen for yourself if you need testimony. https://rumble.com/vbi0x3-watch-rud...ith-bombshell-claims.html?mref=23gga&mc=8uxj1
There is an old saying, ''Before you talk to a mule you need to get their attention'' The saying is peculiar to Missouri but applles but it applies inD2 Saith, ''Listen to yourself if you need testimony.''
It's used in Texas as well.There is an old saying, ''Before you talk to a mule you need to get their attention'' The saying is peculiar to Missouri but applles but it applies in
other areas.
around here, it was weeding carrots and onions.. you'd be on your hands and knees for hours, days, weeks at a time.. when you stood up, you'd just about fall unconcious from the blood draining out of your head.Neither cotton or tobacco were raised where I grew up. But there was acres of berries. I picked strawberries, raspberries, and blueberries. Each in their season. It started when school let out in the first of June and ran until school started again in early September. If you were a hard working berry picker you might make $180 for working 5 days a week all summer. I was so very happy to get old enough to get out of the berry fields and get a job at the breeder farm for a chicken hatchery. It paid $1.25 an hour to clean chicken houses with a scoop shovel and a wheel barrow. Ten bucks a day!!!! I was rolling in the money.
In general, I heard that natural immunity from COVID lasts for about a year, after which you can get infected and get sick again. Vaccination is the only option, it seems to me. We get vaccinated against the flu every year, but this infection mutates and mutates, which means we can still get infected. What will happen with COVID is not yet clear. But vaccination is safer than hoping for "it won't touch me."The vaccines appear to be quite effective, and people skeptical of the long term effects should also consider that we don't have a clue what the long term effects of natural covid infection are, either. I'll take my chances with the vaccine.
I was speaking with a friend in the insurance industry, and he was saying he expects we'll see incentives for people to get vaccinated. People who don't get vaccinated can expect to be paying extra on their monthly premiums.
It's just like the flu.In general, I heard that natural immunity from COVID lasts for about a year, after which you can get infected and get sick again. Vaccination is the only option, it seems to me. We get vaccinated against the flu every year, but this infection mutates and mutates, which means we can still get infected. What will happen with COVID is not yet clear. But vaccination is safer than hoping for "it won't touch me."
Where do you read this nonsense? Of course a flu shot is a vaccine.It's just like the flu.
You get a flu shot not a vaccine.
A vaccine eradicates the disease a flu shot has a 40% effective rate.
Now virus are made up of RNA that is constantly mutating, the flu strand is much shorter than the Corona. What makes you think the Corona isn't going to mutate.
I am going to type slowly for you. A vaccine eradicates virus's like small pox, measles, polio. The flu shot hasn't eradicated anything except folding money from your billfold. It's fantastic for big pharmaceutical not for those that die after receiving the worthless injection each year.Where do you read this nonsense? Of course a flu shot is a vaccine.
Corona is not "just like the flu". Corona vaccines for cattle have been around for years and still work just as well as ever. The volatility of influenza is unique among viruses; it's possible that Covid will behave the same way, but certainly not the most likely outcome.
Just because you restate it over and over doesn't make it more true. The flu shot is a vaccine. The FDA calls it a vaccine. The CDC calls it a vaccine. The WHO calls it a vaccine. Everyone who's not hopped up on anti-vax propaganda calls it a vaccine. There's nothing about eradication in the definition.I am going to type slowly for you. A vaccine eradicates virus's like small pox, measles, polio. The flu shot hasn't eradicated anything except folding money from your billfold. It's fantastic for big pharmaceutical not for those that die after receiving the worthless injection each year.
Of course the survival rate doesn't play well with the compliance mandates.
Again no worse than the flu.
With today's population if the Spanish influenza came through it would literally make this look like a picnic.
CDC shows COVID-19 has high survival rate; doctor still wants to see precautions taken
A CDC update Wednesday says individuals are more likely to survive the coronavirus after contracting it. The health agency says if you have the virus between the ages of 0 to 70, you have a 99% survival rate. And if you’re over 70, the survival rate is nearly 95%. While this CDC update is a […]www.winknews.com
Just because you restate it over and over doesn't make it more true. The flu shot is a vaccine. The FDA calls it a vaccine. The CDC calls it a vaccine. The WHO calls it a vaccine. Everyone who's not hopped up on anti-vax propaganda calls it a vaccine. There's nothing about eradication in the definition.
It would be nice if the flu shot were more effective, but 40-60% is nothing to scoff at. If everyone got it, we'd drastically reduce the spread of the flu and save lives. Just like the Covid death rate, small percentages multiplied out over large numbers make for large numbers.
I don't understand the obsession with trying to compare Covid to things that are more/less deadly. Millions of Americans infected and hundreds of thousands dead is enough to stand on its own
The WHO is a joke and just part of the one world order.Just because you restate it over and over doesn't make it more true. The flu shot is a vaccine. The FDA calls it a vaccine. The CDC calls it a vaccine. The WHO calls it a vaccine. Everyone who's not hopped up on anti-vax propaganda calls it a vaccine. There's nothing about eradication in the definition.
It would be nice if the flu shot were more effective, but 40-60% is nothing to scoff at. If everyone got it, we'd drastically reduce the spread of the flu and save lives. Just like the Covid death rate, small percentages multiplied out over large numbers make for large numbers.
I don't understand the obsession with trying to compare Covid to things that are more/less deadly. Millions of Americans infected and hundreds of thousands dead is enough to stand on its own merit, I'd say.
So if the shot is only 40% effective it doesn't fall under the definition of a vaccine, protecting the person from that disease.
What we are used to is either the killed cell or the modified live virus vaccines. This is new technology and it has proven highly effective since its discovery a few years ago. It has not been used on the "normal flu" to my knowledge. The use of the mRNA technology is why the lightning-fast development of the vaccine has been possible in under a year rather than the normal 6-8 year timeframe.The body then uses the instructions coded in the mRNA to make a new protein that is identical to the selected parts of the virus. Our immune system then reacts to these new proteins, but develops its own response without any danger of infection. The body is then ready to combat the virus if and when it becomes infected.