I wonder how many people in that thread even know the difference between HIV and AIDS.

Not really much use having a memory of how to make antigens and then not doing it.uziq wrote:
the immune system never forgets how to make the antibody. it’s the ambient levels that drop off over time, making you susceptible to reinfection and a renewed inflammatory response. your body doesn’t keep a massive supply of antigens in your blood supply for every illness you’ve ever caught. idiot.
you really should learn the basics of immunology before you start saying you can ‘identify dozens of things to go wrong’ with mRNA, apparently against the better wisdom of the actual virologists who have made it their life’s work. you evidently don’t even know the purpose of T cells as keepers of long-term ‘memory’. your immunity to reinfection is not the same thing.
Why are you obsessed with travel?uziq wrote:
japan opening borders and removing quarantine from march.
so i guess the question is: do i get drunk in kyoto first? go partying in tokyo? perhaps go on a walkabout around osaka without wearing a mask?
dilbert, any ideas? i'm going to visit a farm with foot and mouth disease before i leave.
you really are thick as shit.Dilbert_X wrote:
Strange that a tetanus vaccine is good for ten years but covid vaccine is waning after four doses and three months?
Last edited by uziq (2022-02-17 00:39:54)
amazing how illiterate you are. always retreading the same basics."The mRNA vaccines, including the booster shot, are very effective, but effectiveness declines over time. Our findings suggest that additional doses may be necessary to maintain protection against COVID-19, especially for high-risk populations," said study co-author Brian Dixon, PhD, MPA, Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health director of public health informatics.
Overall, the study reported that individuals with second and third doses of an mRNA vaccine had greater protection against hospitalizations (severe disease) than against emergency department/urgent care (ED/UC) visits (symptoms which may not require hospitalization). Vaccine effectiveness was also lower overall during the Omicron period than during the Delta period.
"Our findings confirm the importance of receiving a third dose of mRNA COVID-19 vaccine to prevent moderate-to-severe COVID-19 illness, especially among those with comorbidities"
but mRnA vAcciNeS are UseLesSA previous infection with SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 vaccination can provide immunity and protection against future illness.
A new study has compared the level of immunity afforded by a previous infection with the protection provided by a COVID-19 vaccine.
The results suggest that COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are around five times more effective at preventing hospitalization than a previous infection.
Seems initial effectiveness against each variant is about the same and wanes at about the same rate.uziq's article wrote:
Vaccine effectiveness against ED/UC visits declined from 97 percent within the first two months of receipt of a booster to 89 percent effectiveness at four months or more during the Delta-predominant period (summer/early fall 2021).
During the Omicron-predominant period (late fall 2021/winter 2021-22), vaccine effectiveness against ED/UC visits was 87 percent during the first two months after a third dose, decreasing to 66 percent at four months after a third dose.
After the third dose, protection against Delta variant-associated hospitalization declined from 96 percent within two months to 76 percent after four months or longer.
Vaccine effectiveness against Omicron variant-associated hospitalizations was 91 percent during the first two months declining to 78 percent at four months.
Not according to the article you quoted yourself.the reasons they have become drastically less effective is because they're v1.0 vaccines addressing v5.0 strains of the pandemic
Study shows waning effectiveness of third dose of mRNA vaccines
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2022-02-17 01:22:08)
Last edited by uziq (2022-02-17 01:35:59)
Last edited by uziq (2022-02-19 05:13:48)
The sad part is I'm right on all this.uziq wrote:
one of the funniest things about dilbert’s character arc through this pandemic is how much his essential position now resembles a joke ending strand from deus ex.
there’s literally an ending in which everyone is encouraged to ‘live in villages’ forever, start over the global order and accept being ruled by an elite made of engineers.
this was satire in the first gen of PC gaming.
here’s an adult man on a 15 year old video game forum unwittingly basing his entire worldview on edgy cyberpunk noir concepts from the 1990s.
are we literally inside a simulation?!
Yes and Britain plans to not detect the next variant. Omicron is bad enough and killing enough people.all the world-leading, much-lauded, highly laurelled nations are reading the data on omicron and ... reopening their borders, relaxing measures, abandoning quarantines
Are these the same people who decided dicking around with gain of function research was "worth risking a pandemic" and then caused it?why would so many experts who have got so much, so right, all at once, in concert, make such a huge mistake
Unless virologists can see into the future 30 years they can't say there is no unforeseen risk.is it like with mRNA? where dilbert, CAD engineer, has spotted an error with the technology that every virologist has missed?