That's what airborne means, dude. This has been explained to you.
I'm aware of that... I only put that in parenthesis because I figured someone would point out airborne is still droplet based because all you guys do is nitpick about small shit that doesn't matter.
....but more likely among those who had covid. And for those people there was a biological indicator linking it to covid.
And, uhrm, no shit the symptoms aren't "isolated to covid". Shortness of breath? Fatigue? Pain in the throat?! If you only accept that a specific illness caused a symptom if that symptom is exclusive to that disease, you couldn't ever diagnose anything!
Yep, that's ridiculous. You believe that equals systematic oppression? I've seen similar instances of cops treating pedestrians badly, or wrongly telling people they can't film... does this mean there's systematic persecution of pedestrians and people with cameras in the US?
More likely in what manner, percentage-based or just higher number? Even during the 1st wave, covid was the dominant viral infection, it just didn't squeeze out everything else yet. You know, that study isn't powered in any way to give you that answer anyways, right? We have no clue of the frequency it happens in covid or the flu or anything else.
I didn't mean the actual symptom itself wasn't isolated to covid (well duh, just like loss of smell/taste are specific to covid vs flu/cold). I mean the length the symptoms like that are persistent isn't isolated to covid, the long part of it.
What are you talking about? Why would I make that argument? I just pointed out bullshit stuff the left did backed by 0 science. None of that happened in Florida for example. Why can't you just admit something your side did was bad when it was bad?
I'm not going to argue stances that you're hallucinating for me and engage with arguments that are wildly off topic based on those hallucinated arguments
Neat. Sugar isn't a poison and if 88% of the United States is metabolically unhealthy then it's very important they get vaccinated
"The next logical point" that I have to defend the fake and false idea that the medical community has thought fat was a poison for 50 years? You and logic aren't on speaking terms
Sounds like they should get fully vaccinated then
You actually want me to believe that somebody getting a covid booster is more vulnerable to covid than somebody who didn't?
Fucking hell
"People who haven't gotten disease before are more likely to get sick from same disease later"
Wow. Shocking. Definitely a Pro-Disease argument. I should go get the flu now just so I don't get the flu later.
Your stance is illogical. We can't discuss lab leak because some people might dislike Chinese because of it? Wouldn't the virus coming from a wet market (that is not a thing in our culture) cause just as much or more Chinese hate? Can we not have Chinese food here because some might not like it and become prejudice against the Chinese? You can only control stuff that is racist vs stuff that may lead to racism.
Everything in the right dose is poison, water can be poison. You squarely just want to disagree with me and nothing else. Just being metabolically unhealthy isn't a risk factor for covid. Also, anyone that had covid before vaccines were available doesn't need the vaccine, mandates made no sense.
Thirty years ago, America declared war against fat. The inaugural edition of Dietary Guidelines for Americans, published in 1980 and subsequently...
slate.com
Why should they get vaccinated if the vaccine is riskier than getting covid? Also parents across the board have been surprisingly smart with not getting their kids vaccinated. Not even 10% of kids under 5 have gotten one dose of the vaccine. And there's no reason they should be getting it.
The clinical outcomes for those (in many groups) who had just gotten vaccinated vs vaccinated + booster show literally no benefit in getting a booster.
But for a couple of years, there was little opportunity for children born during the pandemic or the people around them to catch RSV – or other viruses, for that matter. Their immunity waned or never formed at all. So when those little ones and their parents started to interact with others, they were more likely to get sick.
It's good for your immune system to be working and fighting off things. That's the same thing for allergies too. It was recommended by OFFICIAL and PROFESSIONAL health organizations to not expose kids to peanuts early on and now we have more people with peanut allergies than ever before. It's good to be exposed to things (more often than not).
!00% that the n95 masks are best, but the double cloth masks that a lot of people were using helped a lot also. Not so much on an individual level, like one person using it and no one else, but in a group sense they worked well since they limited how far droplets would travel.
I need to see actual real world data to believe that.