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10MeV 1 point ago +1 / -0

I'm missing the justification for the "doesn't stop you from giving or getting the virus". I see this comment repeated quite a bit, but can't find any source for it.

Our body fights invaders via antibodies identifying them, and then mounting a defense against the tagged invaders.

If you fight off the actual bug, then you have the antibodies for it.

If you get a vaccine, simulating the actual bug, then you have the antibodies for it. Typical vaccines are a weakened or "killed" virus so your body recognizes the molecular structure and makes antibodies. The mRNA "vaccine" causes your own cells to make the spike protein, and then the antibodies to attach to that and identify the virus particle to your immune system.

That's it. That's how our system works, as far as I've ever heard.

So, what in these vaccines makes them somehow different, to not stop you from getting or giving the virus? It just doesn't make sense, and NO ONE has been able to explain why!