• Deconceptualist
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    1510 months ago

    You should still get the boosters because those will both A) help keep you from becoming ill at all, and B) not transmit it to others if you do.

    Most other people aren’t in great shape. Wouldn’t you feel bad if you passed it to someone’s cute kid or lovely grandma and they got severely ill as a result?

      • dandi8
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        10 months ago

        You first start spreading, then you start feeling ill - about 2-3 days later. If you left your home within 2 days before noticing symptoms, you’ve been spreading covid.

    • @[email protected]
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      -610 months ago

      Quit spreading misinformation. It’s been extremely well documented that the vaccines do not prevent spread whatsoever.

      • Deconceptualist
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        10 months ago

        They sure as hell do. Show your sources or GTFO.

        • The vaccine trains your immune system to generate antibodies that target the virus
        • When you get infected, those antibodies attack right away to keep the virus population low
        • With low viral load you literally have fewer viruses to spread to other people

        If you’re not vaccinated (or not boosted for the correct variant) then the virus population blooms much more quickly and you get a higher viral load, meaning your coughs and sneezes are quite literally more contagious.

      • SGNL
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        310 months ago

        Would love to see your source on that.

        But even if that’s true (which I have a hard time believing considering the nature of vaccines), it’s been repeatedly proven that the vaccine does dramatically reduce both symptoms and life-ending complications.

        • @[email protected]
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          010 months ago

          How have you managed to avoid 2-3 years of the news mentioning that? It’s why “herd immunity” isn’t a thing for this disease yet, and why it’s still a problem despite the vaccine, and no, there isn’t enough anti vaxxers to explain it. I mean, for gods sake, there was literally ad campaigns imploring people to get the vaccine because transmission occurs regardless.

          • SGNL
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            210 months ago

            LOL. Your source is an antivax hit piece, with a single quote about unknown efficacy in 2020 tied behind a whole slew of conspiracy logic.

            This is supposed to be painfully obvious?

            Dude…

            • @[email protected]
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              -410 months ago

              Yeah, sure, just ignore the links and references, pretend google doesn’t exist, pretend you haven’t read anything or watched any tv in 2 years, dude.

              • SGNL
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                210 months ago

                Because “Google”, an antivax opinion hitpiece with a single source about efficacy (yes there are other sources about absolutely nothing to do with transmission and more about how poor antivax folks are demonized, cmon dude), and what everyone “just knows” from the last two years are magic arbiters of truth…

                Lol fuck off dude. Give me some actual sources/studies with no opinion whinging and I’ll bite.

                Until then, you’re the very thing you keep writing everything else off as, conspiratorial nonsense.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -210 months ago

                  Always amazing how committed people are to believing lies. That “Hit piece” was literally riddled with links to sources.