Interesting - VERY.
(media.gab.com)
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From videos that I have seen, they produce at least half a dozen vials per second, each containing 5-6 doses, which would reduce the time needed by about a factor of 30-36, which would make it take about a year. But that was only one production line. I think it is possible to produce that amount of this stuff.
However, what worries me more is the logistics of administering the clotshots in combination with the relatively short time of "protection" it gives.
Let's assume we want to vaccinate 100 million people twice a year. That would be 200 million people in 365 days, meaning you have to vaccinate 550,000 people per day.
That is doable, but would take a large effort.
The real problem is then of course that, assuming the protection wears of linearly, by the time you reach your last vaccination, the people who were vaccinated first, will have no protection left. So in reality, even with huge effort vaccinating, you population will only ever have about half the maximum protection.
I have not heard anything about this, but I will be using this information when I will go in front of a judge to explain why I refuse to take the vaccination.
The strategy is failed no matter how you look at it. And this is because the vaccines just do not work well enough. Imagine the vaccine would offer a 5 year protection, then this would not be an issue at all.
100%