Vaccination progress

Gary K

New member
Banned
5.16.21
CDC says 5,800 fully vaccinated people caught Covid-19 ...

you know its worse than that the way the cdc is run
And according to the study done on the VAERS database by a Harvard medical school, that's less than 1% of the total.
 

way 2 go

Well-known member
What utterly shameless deception.

There is no way 3500 Americans have died due to the Covid vaccine in 4 months.

You are trying to pass off something entirely expected - that thousands of Americans who have been vaccinated will have died of something in the last 4 months - and try to connect this causally to the vaccine.
The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) accepts all reports, including reports of vaccination errors. Guidance on reporting vaccination errors is available if you have additional questions. Knowingly filing a false VAERS report is a violation of Federal law (18 U.S. Code § 1001) punishable by fine and imprisonment.
 

marke

Well-known member
5.16.21
CDC says 5,800 fully vaccinated people caught Covid-19 ...

you know its worse than that the way the cdc is run
You would think the CDC would report that there is scant evidence of long-term immunity to covid provided by vaccines. If they were honest, that is.
 

marke

Well-known member
vaccine .7% to 1.1% absolute risk reduction
link
View attachment 1091
What is being reported about the effectiveness of covid vaccines may well be misleading due to outcome reporting bias, as is mentioned in this article:

There are many lessons to learn from the way studies are conducted and results are presented. With the use of only RRRs, and omitting ARRs, reporting bias is introduced, which affects the interpretation of vaccine efficacy.10 When communicating about vaccine efficacy, especially for public health decisions such as choosing the type of vaccines to purchase and deploy, having a full picture of what the data actually show is important, and ensuring comparisons are based on the combined evidence that puts vaccine trial results in context and not just looking at one summary measure, is also important. Such decisions should be properly informed by detailed understanding of study results, requiring access to full datasets and independent scrutiny and analyses.
 

marke

Well-known member
How about that? Covid deaths were falling before the vaccine was introduced and kept falling afterward as well. Some thank Trump for the vaccine. Some thank God for the falling death rates with or without a vaccine.
 

chair

Well-known member
How about that? Covid deaths were falling before the vaccine was introduced and kept falling afterward as well.
Surprisingly enough, the above is false. Cases and deaths started dropping when about 35% of the population was vaccinated, about the beginning of February.
 

Right Divider

Body part
Surprisingly enough, the above is false. Cases and deaths started dropping when about 35% of the population was vaccinated, about the beginning of February.
In both the US and Israel, the number of cases and deaths were coming down about a month before you say.
You're selective use of data is called fibbing.
 

chair

Well-known member
In both the US and Israel, the number of cases and deaths were coming down about a month before you say.
You're selective use of data is called fibbing.
Source? I am using our world in data.

There is a dip in the infections around Jan 20, then they rise again till the beginning of February. Note that 30% of the people were already vaccinated by Jan 20th.

The US is far more complicated, since every state has a different makeup and different policies.

People in glass houses....
 

Right Divider

Body part
Source? I am using our world in data.
I never questioned your source.
There is a dip in the infections around Jan 20, then they rise again till the beginning of February. Note that 30% of the people were already vaccinated by Jan 20th.
The numbers are not that different between places with varying levels of vaccine rates.
You simply assume that the vaccine is the cause for the reduction.
The US is far more complicated, since every state has a different makeup and different policies.
It's also helpful to show that case rates are virtually the same for places with very "different makeups and different policies".
https://www.covidchartsquiz.com/
People in glass houses....
Non-sequitur.
 

Right Divider

Body part
Trump demands to be thanked for the vaccine:

Former President Trump on Tuesday gave himself credit for the current coronavirus vaccine rollout, calling it “one of the greatest miracles of the ages.” - https://thehill.com/homenews/admini...-vaccine-rollout-one-of-the-greatest-miracles
Gee... a president overstating his case... what a crazy thing!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/b...ork-started-before-he-took-office/ar-BB1ev739
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...or-vaccine-work-started-before-he-took-office
 

way 2 go

Well-known member
the leftist are going to love this . ☹️

James O'Keefe reveals bombshell docs showing Facebook 'demoting' users based on 'vaccine hesitancy'

The company has set up a tier system to rank comments on various scales, based on how much the statement questions or cautions against the Covid-19 vaccination.

Tier 2, for instance, represents “Indirect Discouragement” of getting vaccinated and according to PV’s sources, user comments such as these would be heavily “suppressed.”

It doesn’t matter if the comments are true, factual or represent reality. The comment is demoted, buried and hidden from view of the public if it clashes with this system.

“It doesn’t match the narrative,” one insider explained. “The narrative being, get the vaccine, the vaccine is good for you. Everyone should get it. And if you don’t, you will be singled out,”
 
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