The infection argument is easy to prove. The problem here is the fatality rate. The claim by the CDC and MSM is that 90% to 99% of deaths are among the unvaccinated, while the vaccinated catch Covid, survive, and waltz out of the hospital with a super immunity. It's utter nonsense, but I have to prove it.
It does. It's not including the partially vaccinated, and it's also "unadjusted," whatever that means. Of course comparing rates to absolute values is tricky. Even though I don't trust how those rates were calculated, it does make sense that a lot more folks in the UK are vaxxed in week 49 than are unvaxxed. Will need to go through the fine print...
After 90 days, the vaccines make you more vulnerable to infection than unvaccinated people.
https://files.catbox.moe/a44cmf.jpg
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.20.21267966v2.full.pdf
The infection argument is easy to prove. The problem here is the fatality rate. The claim by the CDC and MSM is that 90% to 99% of deaths are among the unvaccinated, while the vaccinated catch Covid, survive, and waltz out of the hospital with a super immunity. It's utter nonsense, but I have to prove it.
CDC doesn't seem to track this information in a publicly accessible form. UK Health however, does. See this report for instance: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1041593/Vaccine-surveillance-report-week-50.pdf (skip down to page 37).
Page 39 shows the rates per 100,000.
It appears to show that the vaccinated have a lower death rate.
It does. It's not including the partially vaccinated, and it's also "unadjusted," whatever that means. Of course comparing rates to absolute values is tricky. Even though I don't trust how those rates were calculated, it does make sense that a lot more folks in the UK are vaxxed in week 49 than are unvaxxed. Will need to go through the fine print...