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by thu2111
1829 days ago
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Exactly. You are arguing that vaccines don't work to protect people from infection but do work to prevent transmission, which is a complete inversion of what vaccines are normally understood to do. You believe the vaccines don't actually work, or rather, that everyone should act as if they don't, which amounts to the same thing At some point I think you have to accept that your stance is an unfalsifiable form of collectivism. You are insisting that everyone injects themselves with something potentially dangerous to reduce your own risk from extremely small to extremely small, on the back of completely novel and extremely questionable claims, and damn the risk to everyone else. |
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> You believe the vaccines don't actually work, or rather, that everyone should act as if they don't
No, and no. These are extremely twisted re-interpretations of what I wrote, and do not reflect my argument or belief.
All I'm arguing is that in the current climate, where the vaccination rate sits at ~45% across the US, it's reasonable to be cautious about situations that involve close indoor contact with unvaccinated folks.
This is a position that I can see changing as vaccination rates and global COVID rates improve.