What that covid is a new class of virus born illness, has been around for over a year, has had a few variations, won't go away for a vaccine (mRNA genetic viral treatment) for what is most likely the original strand, they're already talking about a 4th wave.
Covid like the flu is here to stay this vaccine is too little too late.
That the OP lied about there not being animal testing yet. Animal testing was done in phase 1. We're on phase 3. So regardless of the rest of the argument, the argument stated by OP was based on a false premise. A lot of testing was already done before this started public trials, including animal testing.
Further, the vaccine is not genetic viral treatment. It doesn't use DNA, doesn't touch your DNA, doesn't read your DNA, etc. It uses messenger RNA to have your ribosomes build a specific protein exactly like they do trillions of times every day, then dissolve. The protein, which is the same as one found in the spike on the surface of the coronavirus, is enough for your immune system to recognize and remember for if/when it shows up as part of the whole virus later on so that it can quickly spot it, attack it, and clean it up before it has time to spread and make you sick.
Further, the vaccine does successfully treat it with around a 90 to 95% success rate. What it might not protect you against fully are future strains that might mutate the protein that the vaccine currently uses to recognize the virus.
So while covid might be here to stay, these mRNA vaccines allow us to very rapidly and accurately create vaccines to target the current strain and even to target multiple strains at the same time. So even if it does end up like the flu, we're also now getting ready to launch mRNA flu vaccines for the reasons stated above. They're already through early clinical trials with glowing results.
You don't get it, human testing is still animal testing. What you aren't getting through your head is that this vaccine has been rushed but it's not good enough. The people vaccinated aren't immune they have milder symptoms they are still vectors of transmission and susceptible to covid. This is also a new type of vaccine sending synthetic mRNA commands to change your own cells into being more resistant to the virus instead of a traditional vaccine where you are injected with dead or weakened virus so your body can fight off and make it's own antibodies against the virus naturally.
People are very right to be skeptical of this vaccine. mRNA vaccines are a new thing and have never been successfully done before. So yep you can have as much blind trust on it as you want but we won't know the truth about this vaccine for years maybe decades to come
While yes, humans are animals, human testing and animal testing in clinical trials are two different things, which I think you are well aware of.
Also, nobody said people who get vaccinated aren't immune. What they said was that if you get a new strain, you might not be fully protected but that the symptoms would probably still be more mild. Also, they also said that it's not perfect, but that 90 to 95% effective rate is far better than 0. Again, you could be one of those 5 to 10 out of a hundred that still get it, but you're better off with a 95 out of a 100 odds of not getting it vs 0.
Also, you're COMPLETELY wrong about the mRNA. It isn't sending any commands to change your cells. It's not touching your DNA in any way, it's not making any permanent change to any cells in your body outside of your immune system remembering the end result protein, and that has nothing to do with the mRNA inherently, it's merely dealing with the protein in exactly the same way it would with a traditional vaccine. The only difference is the mRNA being read by ribosomes (enzymes) in your cells to know which amino acids to string in which order, which then folds into the protein. No changes to your cell, no changes to your DNA, etc.
Your body is making antibodies against the foreign protein in EXACTLY the same way. The only difference is how the protein gets there for it to work on. Instead of just injecting a blended up or whole but weakened actual virus, we're just having an enzyme in the cell make us the precise protein we want. Faster, more accurate, etc.
You have a right to be skeptical. That doesn't make your false claims true, or justify the fear you're promoting based on your false understanding and claims about the vaccine, testing, etc.
Further, the mRNA vaccines are literally build on DECADES of work, and HAVE been done successfully numerous times now in clinical testing phases for cancer, flu vaccines, and several other types of vaccines. It's just that none of the others have yet finished the YEARS of normal testing to get full FDA approval. These covid vaccines were fast tracked due to the pandemic, but lots of these vaccines have showed incredible promise and gone through various stages of clinical trials with glowing successes.
What that covid is a new class of virus born illness, has been around for over a year, has had a few variations, won't go away for a vaccine (mRNA genetic viral treatment) for what is most likely the original strand, they're already talking about a 4th wave.
Covid like the flu is here to stay this vaccine is too little too late.
That the OP lied about there not being animal testing yet. Animal testing was done in phase 1. We're on phase 3. So regardless of the rest of the argument, the argument stated by OP was based on a false premise. A lot of testing was already done before this started public trials, including animal testing.
Further, the vaccine is not genetic viral treatment. It doesn't use DNA, doesn't touch your DNA, doesn't read your DNA, etc. It uses messenger RNA to have your ribosomes build a specific protein exactly like they do trillions of times every day, then dissolve. The protein, which is the same as one found in the spike on the surface of the coronavirus, is enough for your immune system to recognize and remember for if/when it shows up as part of the whole virus later on so that it can quickly spot it, attack it, and clean it up before it has time to spread and make you sick.
Further, the vaccine does successfully treat it with around a 90 to 95% success rate. What it might not protect you against fully are future strains that might mutate the protein that the vaccine currently uses to recognize the virus.
So while covid might be here to stay, these mRNA vaccines allow us to very rapidly and accurately create vaccines to target the current strain and even to target multiple strains at the same time. So even if it does end up like the flu, we're also now getting ready to launch mRNA flu vaccines for the reasons stated above. They're already through early clinical trials with glowing results.
You don't get it, human testing is still animal testing. What you aren't getting through your head is that this vaccine has been rushed but it's not good enough. The people vaccinated aren't immune they have milder symptoms they are still vectors of transmission and susceptible to covid. This is also a new type of vaccine sending synthetic mRNA commands to change your own cells into being more resistant to the virus instead of a traditional vaccine where you are injected with dead or weakened virus so your body can fight off and make it's own antibodies against the virus naturally.
People are very right to be skeptical of this vaccine. mRNA vaccines are a new thing and have never been successfully done before. So yep you can have as much blind trust on it as you want but we won't know the truth about this vaccine for years maybe decades to come
While yes, humans are animals, human testing and animal testing in clinical trials are two different things, which I think you are well aware of.
Also, nobody said people who get vaccinated aren't immune. What they said was that if you get a new strain, you might not be fully protected but that the symptoms would probably still be more mild. Also, they also said that it's not perfect, but that 90 to 95% effective rate is far better than 0. Again, you could be one of those 5 to 10 out of a hundred that still get it, but you're better off with a 95 out of a 100 odds of not getting it vs 0.
Also, you're COMPLETELY wrong about the mRNA. It isn't sending any commands to change your cells. It's not touching your DNA in any way, it's not making any permanent change to any cells in your body outside of your immune system remembering the end result protein, and that has nothing to do with the mRNA inherently, it's merely dealing with the protein in exactly the same way it would with a traditional vaccine. The only difference is the mRNA being read by ribosomes (enzymes) in your cells to know which amino acids to string in which order, which then folds into the protein. No changes to your cell, no changes to your DNA, etc.
Your body is making antibodies against the foreign protein in EXACTLY the same way. The only difference is how the protein gets there for it to work on. Instead of just injecting a blended up or whole but weakened actual virus, we're just having an enzyme in the cell make us the precise protein we want. Faster, more accurate, etc.
You have a right to be skeptical. That doesn't make your false claims true, or justify the fear you're promoting based on your false understanding and claims about the vaccine, testing, etc.
Further, the mRNA vaccines are literally build on DECADES of work, and HAVE been done successfully numerous times now in clinical testing phases for cancer, flu vaccines, and several other types of vaccines. It's just that none of the others have yet finished the YEARS of normal testing to get full FDA approval. These covid vaccines were fast tracked due to the pandemic, but lots of these vaccines have showed incredible promise and gone through various stages of clinical trials with glowing successes.