This is not how vaccines are supposed to work.
balderdash
the measles vacccine is only 88% effective against infection, but it still saves lives and it’s still a vaccine. The covid vaccine may not prevent all cases of covid, but it’s undeniable it has mitigated ICU admissions and deaths, especially in the elderly. Consider an embarassing 1 in 3 Americans have reported infections and over a million have died, which doesn’t say much for our genetic resistance.
ancedotally, hubby is the same age as Cameron. He’s had covid twice, the second time with Omnicron was worse. His acquired immunity was a big fat bust. THe same for his brother - caught it twice and also had a hard time plus ‘long covid’. Which just goes to show, ‘acquired’ or ‘vaccinated’ it’s an individual response no matter the vaccines and/or exposures. An older person may gamble on the vaccine; a younger person may gamble on their genes.
Here are the percentages of preventing infection, preventing ICU and preventing deaths, current real world:
https://www.healthdata.org/covid/covid-19-vaccine-efficacy-summary
vs last year real world:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34800687/
Curious; do the remaining 12% have a significant amount of people “dieing unexpectedly”? It seems that 88% immunity rate compared to 0% immunity rate would define the measles shot as a vaccine. The “esteemed” CDC has informed us that the COVID shitshot did not prevent infection, only lessons symptoms, and appears to be more than anecdotal in causing harm. So no, the COVID shitshot is not a vaccine, unless you go by the new definition by the CDC.