"Only a vaccine will work!!"
(www.cbc.ca)
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And the Coronavirus is different. It might that a vaccine for the Coronavirus makes you immune only for a year or two. We have a Pole working at our company and he asked us if vaccines are covered through our health provider. He asked because he wanted to a new round of a vaccine against a virus that ticks can spread. Some sort of encephalitis. But only European ticks spread this virus and not North Americans ones. He told us in Europe most people get a shot against this virus every three years.
You see that every virus is different. Sometimes you will only have to get a new round every ten years. Sometimes it's every three years. And sometimes every year, like with influenzua.
Unless you work with small children (like my wife) or take care of the elderly.
This is where your definition is wrong. Non-immunity doesn't equal death.
This is total relevant. Because a Covid vaccine would work like a Hep A or influenza vaccine. You would just need a boost every year, or two or three. Let see what our docs will come up with.
But you defined it as a white and black problem by saying, if you're not immune, you're going to die.
I don't. It's just one possibility.
This is not true. Attenuated means a "weak version" of the virus. You train your body to fend of a weak version of the virus so it's prepared and trained to fend of the real one.
Then there are inactivated vaccines, where you get an inactive version of the virus. The Hep A and B vaccines fall under this. And currently some Covid vaccines fall under this.
So when the doctors say that the vaccine is good, would you take it?