| > Yes I do. The Antibody Test costs $42 and the vaccine costs $16/dose in the US today. You're ignoring economies of scale, ignoring basic economics (increase supply - price goes down), ignoring the fact that vaccines require 2 dozes - and potentially more, as well as ignoring the additional costs of administering vaccines multiple times. Also, I would like to see where you're getting those numbers from, since a quick google search directly contradicts your numbers: > The U.S. government will pay Pfizer Inc nearly $2 billion for 100 million additional doses of its COVID-19 vaccine to bolster its supply as the country grapples with a nationwide spike in infections. https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-usa-pf... > Nobody was proposing that individuals pay for either one of these. I literally just proposed it to your face 2 times in a row. > The US Government should pay for it using taxes so that even the poorest citizen has access. Oh, look at you, so concerned about the poorest citizen that you want to explicitly deny them the possibility to pay for their own tests and force them to get vaccinated against their will. What a champion of the poor. > Letting people self-certify as a public health strategy has been problematic in the past and would be problematic here too. Did I say anything about 'self-certify' ? Do you want to respond to my actual statement or just continue with these weak strawmen? > It is unsafe (which is factually inaccurate). For the fourth time - show me the data on long term effects. Which part of 'long-term effects' don't you understand? > The vaccine may not add to natural immunity (which as I said, being cheaper and simpler than the alternative testing makes it still worthwhile). Another strawman completely unrelated to anything I've said. > - It is unsafe, and we live in a free society (which is factually inaccurate and irrelevant). Do you see the words 'safe' or 'unsafe' anywhere in my 3rd point? No? Are you going to continue making these fallacious, insincere strawmen, or are you secure enough with your beliefs to actually defend them honestly? > That's because your entire argument hinges on "the vaccine is unsafe" and little else. I've never made a single assertion about the safety of the vaccines other than that we don't know the long term side effects. It's pretty cringy how dishonest you are tbh. |
No, my entire argument is built on economies of scale. Which favor a vaccine for every person, rather than an antibody test for a subset of a subset.
> Did I say anything about 'self-certify' ?
You argued that people should be able to pay for and provide their own tests. That's self-certification. If you're arguing for the state to do it instead, then we're back to square one (i.e. that the logistics don't favor it).
> For the fourth time - show me the data on long term effects. Which part of 'long-term effects' don't you understand?
You cannot argue these two thing together in good faith:
- Natural immunity provides long term immunity, without long term data.
- We cannot know on the vaccine because we lack long term data.
Pick one or the other. Not both.
> I've never made a single assertion about the safety of the vaccines other than that we don't know the long term side effects.
So you didn't make any except that same one in every single one of your comments?