wastedyears wrote: “You cannot get nor give a disease to someone which you have been vaccinated against. This experimental mRNA treatment does not confer immunity, not does it prevent you from giving it to others. It’s not a vaccine.”
A simple google search returns multiple sources that the vaccines do confer immunity (despite the claims of the anti-vaxxer cult). For example:
From Health Matters.
Article Title: “COVID-19 Vaccines and Immunity: How Long Does it Take for the Vaccines to Provide Protection?” “An infectious disease specialist explains how the COVID-19 vaccines work, how long it takes to develop immunity, and what is known about how long immunity lasts.”
“In Phase 3 studies, both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines were found to be 95% effective in the early months after the vaccine. Put simply, “If there were 100 people who would have gotten COVID, it prevented 95 of them from getting it, but it didn’t prevent all 100,” says Dr. Marks. “It definitely provides some protection, but it’s not perfect.”
“The good news is that early data found that those who did contract COVID-19 after receiving the vaccine did not develop a severe form of the disease. “So even if it doesn’t completely prevent illness, the study data shows that it does reduce the severity,” says Dr. Marks.”
https://healthmatters.nyp.org/covid-19-vaccines-and-immunity/
If you get the vaccine for polio, but still get polio, did you get the real vaccine for polio, or merely a placebo? Maybe a bad batch?
If you get a vaccine, that means you cannot get nor transmit the disease for which you were vaccinated against.
If you get the experimental mRNA treatment and still get the China virus, did you really get a vaccine?