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magaeducator [S] 55 points ago +55 / -0

my coworkers (we are teachers) would not see their relatives until they were vaccinated. they complained about not being able to see them over the holidays, and once they got the vaccine, they were literally crying because they were so happy to see them again. it makes no sense to me

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Pepehands 8 points ago +8 / -0

First off it's not a vaccine. Second it doesn't stop you from giving or getting the virus.

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CucksForTheDonald 5 points ago +5 / -0

It suppresses symptoms, which makes it a vaccine in the same way that we have a "vaccine" for the Marek's virus in chickens.

The vaccine for the Marek's virus also suppresses symptoms but allows the virus to reproduce and propagate. As a result, vaccinated chickens become petri dishes for incredibly nasty strains of the virus, the hottest of which are capable of killing 100% of unvaccinated chickens within 10 days.

One of the possible endgames is that the globalists know this, and that they're trying to create Marek's virus for humans. Covid itself is mild, but if they get enough people vaccinated, the vaccinated population may become a breeding ground for nasty versions of Covid that will kill the unvaccinated.

Perhaps enough have already been vaccinated for this to occur.

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Pepehands 1 point ago +1 / -0

Sort of but virus' mutate to be less harmful and spread easier. They don't mutate to become more "deadly" per se.