The more replications you give the virus, the more opportunities it has for a successful mutation. A vaxxed individual is much more likely to have a shorter, more contained infection course compared to an unvaxxed one, therefore far fewer opportunities for mutations & spread.
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Lazy reporting
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No it’s not. Vaccines prevent serious illness and death, but they don’t prevent infection; SARS-COV-2 is here for good, even in a world where everyone is vaccinated—a world that we will never see. People will catch it 100 years from now. Learn to deal and move on.
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I will gladly donate any vaccine assigned for me to someone in a developing country.
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Yup. Since about April, the US maintained a daily surplus of 70 million doses and over 100 million for the past month. It's indefensible for the US to have ever maintained that level of surplus.
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This is Press at its worse, vaccines only work with herd immunity, so the best strategy is for countries that have the resources to get to herd immunity to do so as fast as possible, and then help the next fastest country that can do it. Rinse and repeat.
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South Africa has recently been asking vaccine makers to slow down their deliveries since there's been a major slowdown in people looking to get vaccinated. It's not lack of supply that's the problem; it's vaccine hesitancy and lack of trust in governments.
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