Being vaccinated also gives you better odds of a vaccine injury. But of course, you will ignore that because the media doesn’t report it.
Unvaccinated are a little over-represented in hospitals.
And, i’ve never been against vaccines. Certain people should definitely get it. Fat people that are unwilling to take care of themselves definitely need to get the Covid vaccines, and the majority of fat people already have.
Being vaccinated also gives you better odds of a vaccine injury. But of course, you will ignore that because the media doesn’t report it.
The media doesn't report it because it doesn't happen often enough to make it worth their while. The Medical journals do, though. You've seen my earlier links to studies that show how rare vaccine injuries are. I liked the one that said you have a better chance of getting injured by a toilet.
I know vaccine injuries are rare, just as it’s rare that a healthy person has a bad outcome from a covid infection. Media, however, will over-exaggerate the bad covid outcomes, making it seem much worse than it is and you fall far it.
And, the current covid vaccines are crap anyway. So what if it can decrease a healthy person’s outcome of a bad covid infection by 35%? If a healthy person has a .2% chance of a bad outcome from a covid infection and a covid vaccine can cut the odds of a bad outcome by 35% to .13%, you’re so unlikely to have a bad outcome either way, but now you also add the possibility of a vaccine injury. However, that 35% sounds like a big number to innumerate people, which describes the majority of the population.
And, covid vaccine injuries are real. I personally know 3 people that were hospitalized with covid and i also know 3 people with bad vaccine injuries. There are risks either way, but the media overly exaggerates one and not the other.
I had covid. I recovered fast. I have natural antibodies. People like you still push me to get vaccinated. That’s beyond stupid.
People like you pushing covid vaccines on everybody, regardless of health status because “probabilities” is irresponsible. The probabilities you speak of vary incredibly depending on many factors, including age, general health, and body weight, but people like you will never take that into account because the media doesn’t push it and you can’t think for yourself.
Then why are unvaccinated people over-represented in the hospital and ICU beds?
I had covid. I recovered fast. I have natural antibodies.
And every study that looks at it says if you get it again the odds are you will benefit from having been vaccinated as well.
People like you pushing covid vaccines on everybody, regardless of health status because “probabilities” is irresponsible.
Our healthcare system is designed, staffed, and funded based on probabilities, and you can see that the probability of a global pandemic was heavily discounted when the funding aspect was considered. The system is struggling.
But you'll take your chances and if it goes south for you you'll be off to emergency as quick as you can, demanding healthcare.
You shouldn't be lecturing on probabilities. You have no clue on how to interpret probabilities and use it in real life. Your interpretation of probabilities is akin to "you're less likely to get hit by lightning if you wear this special hat endorsed by pharma, so everybody should wear this hat at all times."
Vaccines decrease your probability of ending up in ICU on a macro level. I think we all know that. That's not the end of the story and does not mean that everybody should get vaccinated.
Being vaccinated also gives you better odds of a vaccine injury. But of course, you will ignore that because the media doesn’t report it.
Unvaccinated are a little over-represented in hospitals.
And, i’ve never been against vaccines. Certain people should definitely get it. Fat people that are unwilling to take care of themselves definitely need to get the Covid vaccines, and the majority of fat people already have.
The media doesn't report it because it doesn't happen often enough to make it worth their while. The Medical journals do, though. You've seen my earlier links to studies that show how rare vaccine injuries are. I liked the one that said you have a better chance of getting injured by a toilet.
I know vaccine injuries are rare, just as it’s rare that a healthy person has a bad outcome from a covid infection. Media, however, will over-exaggerate the bad covid outcomes, making it seem much worse than it is and you fall far it.
And, the current covid vaccines are crap anyway. So what if it can decrease a healthy person’s outcome of a bad covid infection by 35%? If a healthy person has a .2% chance of a bad outcome from a covid infection and a covid vaccine can cut the odds of a bad outcome by 35% to .13%, you’re so unlikely to have a bad outcome either way, but now you also add the possibility of a vaccine injury. However, that 35% sounds like a big number to innumerate people, which describes the majority of the population.
And, covid vaccine injuries are real. I personally know 3 people that were hospitalized with covid and i also know 3 people with bad vaccine injuries. There are risks either way, but the media overly exaggerates one and not the other.
I had covid. I recovered fast. I have natural antibodies. People like you still push me to get vaccinated. That’s beyond stupid.
People like you pushing covid vaccines on everybody, regardless of health status because “probabilities” is irresponsible. The probabilities you speak of vary incredibly depending on many factors, including age, general health, and body weight, but people like you will never take that into account because the media doesn’t push it and you can’t think for yourself.
Fifteen percent of the virus victims hospitalized and ten percent of those in ICUs have been under 40. https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/epidemiological-summary-covid-19-cases.html
Then why are unvaccinated people over-represented in the hospital and ICU beds?
And every study that looks at it says if you get it again the odds are you will benefit from having been vaccinated as well.
Our healthcare system is designed, staffed, and funded based on probabilities, and you can see that the probability of a global pandemic was heavily discounted when the funding aspect was considered. The system is struggling.
But you'll take your chances and if it goes south for you you'll be off to emergency as quick as you can, demanding healthcare.
You shouldn't be lecturing on probabilities. You have no clue on how to interpret probabilities and use it in real life. Your interpretation of probabilities is akin to "you're less likely to get hit by lightning if you wear this special hat endorsed by pharma, so everybody should wear this hat at all times."
Vaccines decrease your probability of ending up in ICU on a macro level. I think we all know that. That's not the end of the story and does not mean that everybody should get vaccinated.
Your obsession with covid vaccines is abnormal.