Try walking around without a mask, and when confronted, say "I already had COVID, I'm basically a god now.", you won't get a positive response. You'll get "but you can get reinfected!"
And then they'll follow it up with "you still need to wear a mask until you get a vaccine!"
...What is a vaccine? What is the process it uses? It's not magic Elixer made with the philosopher's stone to grant life, it's a very specific thing. If vaccines work, and generally they do, people who have had COVID should be free to ignore all COVID restrictions. If COVID is like the common cold coronavirus, and what are the odds of that, then we lose antibodies quickly: No vaccine will work. We will lose the antibodies. That's why there's no vaccine for the common cold.
There's no current innoculation for the common coronavirus cold, and we've been researching that for decades. Decades. I'd have serious doubts we suddenly make a breakthrough now.
As I understand it, each time you get a cold you're getting a slightly mutated virus with a slightly different shape that your immune system doesn't recognize.
You retain the ability to make antibodies to the ones you've been exposed to. That's why you have no idea hour many colds you've not suffered because they were the exact same rhinovirus you've had before.
Try walking around without a mask, and when confronted, say "I already had COVID, I'm basically a god now.", you won't get a positive response. You'll get "but you can get reinfected!"
And then they'll follow it up with "you still need to wear a mask until you get a vaccine!"
...What is a vaccine? What is the process it uses? It's not magic Elixer made with the philosopher's stone to grant life, it's a very specific thing. If vaccines work, and generally they do, people who have had COVID should be free to ignore all COVID restrictions. If COVID is like the common cold coronavirus, and what are the odds of that, then we lose antibodies quickly: No vaccine will work. We will lose the antibodies. That's why there's no vaccine for the common cold.
There's no current innoculation for the common coronavirus cold, and we've been researching that for decades. Decades. I'd have serious doubts we suddenly make a breakthrough now.
Right, I know that. Was only repeating they're admitting it will be pricy,
As I understand it, each time you get a cold you're getting a slightly mutated virus with a slightly different shape that your immune system doesn't recognize.
You retain the ability to make antibodies to the ones you've been exposed to. That's why you have no idea hour many colds you've not suffered because they were the exact same rhinovirus you've had before.