In theory, if every person (and possible carrier) is vaccinated, the disease is beat.
Minimizing variants (and the creation of vaccine immune variants) by maximizing vaccinations is also a goal. This has to be done carefully to maximize the chances of success.
Since the virus has animal hosts too, beating it may not be possible.
The effort to fight Covid is also hampered by the unnecessary/repugnant use of fetal cells and the failure to advance the use of non-human cell vaccines such as Covaxin.
Since these “vaccines” are responsible for the viral mutations I fail to see how vaccinating everyone stops the virus. But enjoy your endless series of booster shots. Pfizer, Moderna and J&J thank you for the business.
I'll just point out here that this "universal vaccination" thingee is the same thing as the Paris Climate Accords.
The Paris scammers pretend that the US and Europe reducing their emissions unilaterally while countries like India and China continue to pump coal emissions into the atmosphere will somehow "clean the air" and "stop global warming" - as if China and India are on a different planet.
Similarly, pretending that you'll get universal vaccination while entire continents like Africa and South America, and places like East Asia are not "down" with getting needles in the arm [a cultural thing for many] is just a non-starter.
So, it's some sort of global agenda, in my book.
These scammers are good at pretending. I'm good at noticing.
You seriously don’t know Jack $hit about virology or science it appears.
Vaccinating against any coronavirus by attacking only one narrow point of the virus will drive mutations thru the roof.
Of course if they really wanted to end this virus we would be following India’s path rather than our own.
leaky vaccines more reasonably can be expected to produce both some form of vaccine escape and a Marek’s situation.
the science people pushing this know this to be so.
... if the vaccine actually "prevented" Covid. But the theorists have had to concede that Covid infections are noticeable even in those who've been jabbed. It doesn't prevent it. Apparently the "vaccinated" continue to be occasionally infected; carriers, though usually without symptoms. They will fight it off quickly; that's what the CDC claims. But that's an admission that the frequently mutating virus lives on, circulating from person to person, even if all are "vaccinated". It wouldn't take animal hosts to cause the "vaccine" to fail. Circulating at low detection levels, eventually it can develop a mutation that gets around the shield provided by the narrowly focused "vaccine". Maybe it already has.
Anyone without natural immunity will have to fight off all aspects of the mutated virus. Those with natural immunity may only have to fight off the new feature. The good news is it's probably mutated in other ways at the same time, and probably less deadly because of it.
Virologists have tried unsuccessfully for decades to make a vaccine against the common cold. Even though this "vaccine" is a whole different animal (mRNA), it's apparent by now that it's just as fallible as any other cold vaccine they've tried to make.