508mikey
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I know, I had mono, strep throat more times than I would care to count and made mud pies to throw at my sister. Covid kicked my but too. I’m inclined to say that if I were exposed to a heavy viral load case, I’d be fine.As a kid in South Carolina in the 70s, I played in ditches, flooded yards, ate mud pies, and probably drank enough water from a garden hose to fill an Olympic size pool. Covid kicked my ass, but if not for all the crap I as exposed to as a kid, it probably would have killed me.
I've been struggling to understand the discrepancy between the "reporting" in the U.S. and both what is being seen in other countries and what I am hearing from colleagues in this country. This very well would explain it:
Top epidemiologist: CDC undercounting vaccinated COVID cases
Have you heard anyone suggest that before? Like, especially while the older/at-risk were being sheltered?So now let's introduce this theoretical scenario.
If having had covid is much more effective than vaccines, in protecting against variants like Delta....then govments everywhere have effed up. Because now Delta is the dominant strain.
Been better off if more people had acquired natural immunity prior to worse variant arriving.
"After a year and a half of all of this, to go out feeling confident with the vaccine and then get it - it was just upsetting," Reider said. Still, he added, "it was nowhere near as bad as the times that I've had pneumonia or a severe flu or cold."
Because unless you go in the hospital or die the vaccinated with covid isn't being counted.I've been struggling to understand the discrepancy between the "reporting" in the U.S. and both what is being seen in other countries and what I am hearing from colleagues in this country. This very well would explain it:
Top epidemiologist: CDC undercounting vaccinated COVID cases
The Center Square) – The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously ruled that the national eviction moratorium mandated by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is unconstitutional. The court said in its ruling that the matter ultimately needed to be resolved by Congress.
The three-judge panel ruled that the CDC engaged in federal overreach by mandating that tenants who are unable to pay their rent and are in breach of their rental agreements may not be evicted. The CDC had implemented a moratorium in response to millions of people losing their jobs due to governors shutting down their state economies to slow the spread of COVID-19.