Praying all she gets is sick.
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If you catch Covid, most likely you will have no symptoms or very mild cold for a day, if you take the vax you are likely to have symptoms (side effects) which are worse.
If you catch Covid you are then immune, with all research pointing to lifetime immunity. If you get the vax, the manufacturer and research states you have no immunity and can still catch and spread it and get more boosters seasonally.
Why are people getting vaccinated, what is the advantage? Those who said early on to just let people catch it and build herd immunity were ridiculed but they were right.
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.
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.
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.