Quote:
Originally Posted by Whitley
Is there a study that shows that 95% figure. I am confused as to how they can say1) the jab will prevent you from getting and spreading covid to 2) The jab prevents you from getting hospitalized. With the differing strains of covid, it seems like a hail Mary plan, let's throw it out there and see what happens, to say "Sure you still caught covid, but had you not gotten the jab and subsequent boosters you really would have gotten it worse. I seem to have had covid and did not even know it. Right away I hear, "well thank God you were jabbed or you could have gotten really ill". What proof it there of that. Are they comparing the new vewrsions of covid against the original hospitalization rates?
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A lot of questions. The answers are out there if you care to find them.
Yes, there is a study. It was the report of the trial of the Pfizer vaccine.
The manufacturer did not say the jab will prevent you from getting or spreading covid. (but you already knew that since you quoted the post I used when someone else made the same assertion.)
I believe the manufacturer can say that the jab will keep some from being hospitalized because they performed trials with the vaccine that showed that to be the case. I believe they can continue to say that because tens of millions of people have taken the vaccine and hospitalizations and deaths have fallen dramatically.
What proof is there that it was the vaccine that kept one individual from getting more sick? In the case of a virus that is not 100% deadly there is absolutely no proof for that one individual. However, the vaccine trials enrolled more than one individual and if you read the report you will see how the conclusion was derived. Also, as I noted above, tens of millions have now received the vaccine and hospitalizations and deaths have dropped dramatically. Does that 100% prove the vaccine worked? No, but if the choice is between the vaccine, chemtrails, space aliens, or sunspots causing the drop, I'll put my money on the vaccine.
Look, we've had nearly three years of debate about the vaccine. I choose to believe the studies and the data and the real world observations. Others choose to believe the conspiracies and deny what to me seems obvious. It is unlikely that there are any arguments that have not been made and it is foolish to believe anyone is going to change their mind now.