Because it kills people at an incredible rate. — Valentinus
Pathetic ad hominem attempt. There's obviously a difference between avoiding people and vaccinating them, so either you're dense beyond reason or you're intellectually dishonest. Which leads one to wonder, what is your motivation? Might you be desperate to peddle your theories because you cannot actually show your human vacuum cleaner theory true?For those of you, like InPitzotl, that have difficulty in understanding the difference between "social distancing" and "herd immunity", — Roger Gregoire
Nope. The bottom line is this:Bottom-line — Roger Gregoire
...versus this:For the more healthy people we get to take off their masks and start social distancing full time, the faster this virus will dissipate, and the more lives we will save. — Roger Gregoire
https://youtu.be/Et_J8_x4qBs?t=604To control a germ, the goal is to get enough people {recovered and immune} and fewer people {dead} so that the germ has no susceptible people left to infect. Some people {Roger} argue we should get people into the immune bucket by just letting them get infected, and then recover, like a big global chicken pox party for Covid-19. But without a vaccine, if the only pathway to this recovered group is to get infected, that means some people are going to end up here... dead. What a vaccine does is let you jump straight from {susceptible} to {recovered and immune}, and avoid {dead}. And if we have a choice that lets us avoid death, why wouldn't we take it? — Dr. Joe Hanson
Besides which; it's not your job to decide how to fight this virus. This is a situation where the patriotic thing to do, the sensible and capitalist thing to do, is wear the mask, wash your hands, keep your distance from people, and get vaccinated asap. — counterpunch
I am supposed to sell the public health pitch to my patients so it is more than slightly helpful if I believe it at all. — Book273
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