Corona virus, Port and the AFL. Part 4.

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They’ll be in lockdown again by mid December.


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No we won't dickhead
Why would we be in lockdown with more than 95% of the population vaccinated? You sound really unhappy that Victoria and NSW are deciding to get on with life with high vaccination levels.. ?
 

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https://spectator.com.au/2021/10/vaccination-race-that-stopped-a-nation/

Even more incomprehensible is the failure of any Australian government, state or federal, to support the vaccine being developed by Professor Nikolai Petrovsky of Flinders University in South Australia.

It was funding from the US National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) that allowed his biotech Vaxine to conduct highly successful animal trials which showed his vaccine blocked symptomatic infection and, unlike the current leaky vaccines, may also prevent transmission.

That really would be a game changer. Instead of endless boosters and cases, it could end the pandemic. If the vaccine lives up to the promise of the animal trials, it will be rapidly approved overseas.

Whether the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) would follow suit however is far from certain. Petrovsky is both brilliant and honest. In May last year, when establishment scientists around the world were lying through their teeth that the virus could only have a natural origin, he was a lone voice with the courage and integrity to point out that Sars-Cov-2 was likely to have emerged in a lab because its spike protein binds more tightly to its human cell receptor, than to the target receptors on any other species.
 
So you're saying there are categories of people who probably don't need to be vaccinated due to the risk profile, but they should get vaccinated anyway to help those out in high risk? Interesting take, as seems to be opposite of many here who believe everyone is at risk
Good bloke, that NicNat.

 
Educate me on the long term affects from let’s say, Pfizer ?

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Have you had any long term effects from any of your previous vaccinations? Vaccination history tells us that "long" term effects are extremely rare and if anything is going to happen to you it will happen within the first two months. Are you worried about the long term effects of contracting Covid? The border is about to open and we're all about to get infected. Covid can cause long-term breathing problems, heart complications, chronic kidney problems, stroke or temporary paralysis. A mate of mine in London who was a marathon runner now can't make it around the block, she had covid last year. Some adults and children experience multisystem inflammatory syndrome after they have had COVID-19.

Are you vaccinated?
 

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Anti vaxers should have to wear a special hat so you can avoid them in public

I'm torn between tinfoil or a little propeller cap

Well whatever you do, don’t leave supply to Pappagallo or they’ll all be dead from COVID before they get to wear them.
 
Two thirds of the cases reported ea h day in Victoria are from the unvaccinated. Among today's death toll is a woman in her 20's and a man in his 40's so more proof that COVID does not just threaten the elderly. Since the Delta outbreak started in melbourne there have been 230 deaths and there are currently 24,831 active cases in Victoria.

 
Two thirds of the cases reported ea h day in Victoria are from the unvaccinated. Among today's death toll is a woman in her 20's and a man in his 40's so more proof that COVID does not just threaten the elderly. Since the Delta outbreak started in melbourne there have been 230 deaths and there are currently 24,831 active cases in Victoria.


Yeah there's no context is given around that. Pretty much all of the younger people who have died from "Covid" or "Covid complications" have had serious existing illnesses. Covid seems to work as an accelarator of death, not the root cause of death. In some cases, without COVID they may have got past their existing illnesses, in others it has just speed up the dying process. Some people feel locking people in their houses for many months to avoid this is justifiable.
 
Yeah there's no context is given around that. Pretty much all of the younger people who have died from "Covid" or "Covid complications" have had serious existing illnesses. Covid seems to work as an accelarator of death, not the root cause of death. In some cases, without COVID they may have got past their existing illnesses, in others it has just speed up the dying process. Some people feel locking people in their houses for many months to avoid this is justifiable.
Again it's not just about the deaths from covid but the flow on effect from hospitisations. Just transferring someone with covid around a hospital requires 8-9 staff instead of 2 for a non covid patient.. How do you still not get that yet? Whilst we had low vaccination coverage it would of been impossible for hospitals to keep up. We can't keep pulling staff from other areas and cancelling elective surgery forever. Now that we've got high levels hospitisation rates are falling by the week despite increased cases.
 
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