Interesting to see that Big Pharma scientists are saying that they believe Natural Immunity is better than a vaccine. https://rumble.com/vncroh-pfizer-in...-about-the-company-project-veritas-video.html
Now share a single article where it's argued that vaccines are better than natural immunity, because I can't find one.
Good find. It is a new study though and I was alluding to the fact that this hasn't been the common argument. It's been widely known for a long time already that vaccinated individuals are carriers of the virus. The argument should be focused on reduced hospital strain
Like these? *https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/covid-19-studies-natural-immunity-versus-vaccination *https://www.immunology.org/coronavi...rces/covid-immunity-natural-infection-vaccine *https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02532-4
Why should COVID hospital strain be the primary focus? 17.9 million people die from heart disease each year. Many multiples of COVID, even at COVID's peak. Isn't this causing hospital strain?
What's the evidence that you can catch covid that way? Covid has had no impact on the homeless and drug affected that I see. Still the same number asking for help and no piles of sick people anywhere. You would expect them to have the greatest exposure to being dribbled on!
Do you have anything to say about this disease not affecting the vulnerable living in the street who do not practice the highest standards of hygiene. Does that cause any dissonance with the belief that covid is extremely contagious and deadly.
^may be same as Malaria, the poor people living in slump got antibody so the infected never go near the living in the street to spread covid
I don't understand your word salad. If the poor get antibodies when exposed then so can everyone (who recovers).
No. To answer your original question: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/how-covid-spreads.html Obviously being dribbled on or licking someone's tonsils is not one of the three main ways.
From the Wall Street Journal: https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-ex...d-19-there-is-a-growing-consensus-11592317650 Maybe the homeless don't dribble on each other or lick each other's tonsils for an extended period of time?
Ok I can see you are going to respond with the very propoganda that the observations and questions clearly refute. That quote is a generic model for virus transmission. It does not deal with the claimed ease of transmission compared to regular flu or the virulence of this particular virus.