Praying all she gets is sick.
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It's a cold virus (corona) ... not trying to argue but "standard immunity" to a cold virus is 3 months and they constantly mutate. That's why many people in medical field scoff at this vaccine for a common cold ... if it could've been done ... it would've happened 40 years ago.
... and, if there is a true vaccine ... it would never be used. Pharma companies aren't going to let 35% of the world never get a cold again. That's about as fact as it gets.
Also - this is key - all viruses that start out with a higher than normal kill rate - will mutate to a weaker version of itself to not kill their hosts. When the virus realizes it's killing its host - it adapts to keep the host alive longer so it can travel further to future hosts - it cannot survive long-term if it continues killing hosts at a high rate because it cannot survive outside of a living body for more than 9 hours.
This why the vaccine propaganda states, "the vaccine will make you less likely to get seriously ill." Because they already know the virus has tamed itself down on its own and no one will get as sick from it as it started out.
Come this fall ... if a "variant" of C-19 is starting to kill people at a higher rate than now - rest assured - they either put a new strain out from a lab - or the vaccine is killing people.
I agree with all of this comment.
My theory is that the "common cold" is God's way (or nature if you prefer) of keeping human immune systems vibrant. Just as kids these days are developing asthma because their parents shielded them from "germs" when they were young, if humans were shielded from ever having to fight of the cold virus, they would then not be able to fight off more severe viruses.
Totally agree.
I understand your reasoning, however can you then explain how those who survived SARS-Cov-1 over 17 years ago still have immunity when tested?
While SARS and the common are both in the corona virus category due to their shape, I think they are still different as indicated by the long term immunity with SARS versus the common cold virus.
I understand your reasoning, however can you then explain why those who survived SARS-CoV-1 over 17 years ago still have immunity today?
While SARS and the common cold are both in the corona virus category due to their structure, they are still different as shown by the long lasting immunity for SARS survivors versus short term immunity we see with the common cold.
The reason for the short-term immunity is because there are more than 160 strains of rhinovirus, and developing a vaccine or antibodies that target so many strains at once (all of which can mutate, of course) is nigh impossible with our current technology.
Exactly.
Yes. You are totally immune to the strain that you get sick from. Totally. It's a mutated strain that can get you sick 3 months later. The human immune system is amazing and viruses are equally amazing. It's a constant battle. So - yeah, people who got "Covid-19" won't get "Covid-19" again - they'll get a mutated strain.
Not all viruses are "food-chain survivors" ... just like the animal kingdom ... and viruses have a much shorter life span than typical animal species'. Some never achieve what they started out to do. Take a good look at HIV (a deep look is necessary, my mother-in-law has it) and see that they claim medications are curbing it's mortality rate? Is it really the medications or did the virus adapt to a symbiotic relationship with humans? ... It's phenomenal what has happened to HIV over the years.