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by haswell
1828 days ago
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> You are arguing that vaccines don't work to protect people from infection but do work to prevent transmission > 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. |
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1. If vaccines stop infection, then you don't need to care if other people are sick or not.
2. Therefore you argue that because they might not be 100% effective at that, everyone should act as if they aren't effective at all, and ban unvaccinated people from things.
3. But what if the vaccine isn't 100% effective at blocking transmission either? Then a vaccinated person might be both sick and infectious. In which case as they'd be dangerous to other vaccinated people, they should also be banned, which means everyone is banned.
Therefore by contradiction you must believe it's possible that they block transmission 100% but not infection. This makes no biological sense and isn't supported by robust science. In fact even asymptomatic transmission as a concept isn't supported by robust science - actual contact tracing attempts to find this keep drawing blanks. The belief it must be common comes from attempts to make models work mathematically, but those models are so filled with basic errors nothing about them is useful.