Irrelevant to this discussion. Since vaccinated people catch and spread covid19, even in a setting where 100% of people are vaccinated, it should still spread. The vaccine isn't 100% effective and its effectiveness declines with time. My guess that non-outbreak has a lot more to do with natural immunity than it does vaccinations.
It's not irrelevant. If 80% of the population in Ontario are vaccinated and if the vaccine doesn't prevent infections (which is your claim), then 80% of new cases should be vaccinated. But what we see is that the 20% which are unvaccinated are causing 65 to 70% of the new cases.
Yeah, actually it's completely irrelevant to this specific topic of a mass mostly-outdoors event not resulting in an outbreak despite fear-mongering predictions.
Irrelevant to this discussion. Since vaccinated people catch and spread covid19, even in a setting where 100% of people are vaccinated, it should still spread. The vaccine isn't 100% effective and its effectiveness declines with time. My guess that non-outbreak has a lot more to do with natural immunity than it does vaccinations.
It's not irrelevant. If 80% of the population in Ontario are vaccinated and if the vaccine doesn't prevent infections (which is your claim), then 80% of new cases should be vaccinated. But what we see is that the 20% which are unvaccinated are causing 65 to 70% of the new cases.
Yeah, actually it's completely irrelevant to this specific topic of a mass mostly-outdoors event not resulting in an outbreak despite fear-mongering predictions.
You should have told them that all of them are vaccinated, since it's a requirement to attend McMaster. That would have stopped their fear mongering.
I guess but in the USA not everyone is and they have packed college football stadiums and cases went down.
These fear-mongers know that it's a requirement but they still promote doom and gloom.