The Coronavirus, not the beer

3. Omicron is a good thing because it causes a significantly lower rate of serious cases (I've seen one notable person refer to it as the common cold).

Do you not think omicron is a positive development?
My kids' pediatrician office might be the best in the metro area and they said being vaccinated and then catching omicron is probably the best case scenario at this time as far as COVID. I have a six month PCP visit tomorrow to go more in depth, but his initial reaction to me having a mild, likely omicron, case was "good."
 
It’s like listening to someone claim things are anti democratic while they themselves are in favor of anti democratic things


[tw] 1478129950829989889[/tw]
 
The NCAA has set a contingency plan for Saturday's FCS Championship Game.
Once the Omicron variant started affecting sports, the NCAA quickly acted to put contingencies in place for the College Football Playoff. On Monday, they put them in for Saturday's FCS Championship Game. They set the minimum eligible players at 53, including seven OL, four DL, one QB, and two countable coaches. A school still could choose to play if they fall below these minimums if they so choose. If one or both teams fall below the minimum before they arrive in Texas, the game would be pushed back to Friday, January 14th. If they fall below the minimum after they arrive in Texas, the game would be declared a no contest. If it was just one team, the other would be declared the National Champion. If it was both teams, the title would be vacated for the year. This is far from the ideal scenario, but very fitting for the times.
 
Do you not think omicron is a positive development?
My kids' pediatrician office might be the best in the metro area and they said being vaccinated and then catching omicron is probably the best case scenario at this time as far as COVID. I have a six month PCP visit tomorrow to go more in depth, but his initial reaction to me having a mild, likely omicron, case was "good."

I do think Omicron is a positive development. It shows movement towards this becoming an endemic disease on the level of the flu. It's a very positive step. My point was that the vaccines have played a key role in this. In order to evade vaccine immunity, Covid had to undergo a lot of mutations and these mutations have caused it to lose fitness and cause less severe disease.

Basically, the vaccines have played a key role in all this. It goes against what some have been saying about how there shouldn't be mass vaccinations because that will lead to bad results.
 
No big deal

[Tw]1478368214690279432[/tw]

And then add on all the myocarditis we are inflicting on young men with pointless vaccinations.

Child abuse the past two years sponsored by the global apparatus and the American progressives.
 
I do think Omicron is a positive development. It shows movement towards this becoming an endemic disease on the level of the flu. It's a very positive step. My point was that the vaccines have played a key role in this. In order to evade vaccine immunity, Covid had to undergo a lot of mutations and these mutations have caused it to lose fitness and cause less severe disease.

Basically, the vaccines have played a key role in all this. It goes against what some have been saying about how there shouldn't be mass vaccinations because that will lead to bad results.

Mass vaccination has led to bad results. There is zero point in vaccinating healthy people. ZERO. No reduced spread. Already miniscule hospitalization rates. All we added was side effects that are severely underreported and for some reason you believe the data that Pfizer won't even allow anyone to see.
 
Mass vaccination has led to bad results. There is zero point in vaccinating healthy people. ZERO. No reduced spread. Already miniscule hospitalization rates. All we added was side effects that are severely underreported and for some reason you believe the data that Pfizer won't even allow anyone to see.

This statement is long on speculation and short on fact. It's why I dropped out of this thread a while back and will probably drop out again soon.
 
This statement is long on speculation and short on fact. It's why I dropped out of this thread a while back and will probably drop out again soon.

I understand. When the official narrative changes is when you change.

Not allowing the public to see the data was the final tell that tacked on to physicians testimonies as to what they are seeing in their ER's.
 
I understand. When the official narrative changes is when you change.

Not allowing the public to see the data was the final tell that tacked on to physicians testimonies as to what they are seeing in their ER's.

I'd wager we all know someone who has died of Covid. Probably multiple people. Most of us probably know someone who was in pretty good health with years of life in front of them that has died of Covid. I'd also wager that all of us know someone that was considered low risk that ended up seriously sick with Covid and in the hospital.

Finally, I'll wager none of us knows anyone who died or was even made seriously ill by the vaccine.
 
We certainly know people that were listed as dying with COVID on their death certificates. I agree with you.

Still believing that secret Pfizer data eh.....
 
Back
Top