This “door to door” thing is actually impossible under the current system. Contrary to what many think, there isn’t a national database of who received the vaccine.
It just doesn’t exist. It would be impossible to go door to door to every household in the United States. (Even the Census doesn’t actually do that.)
While there probably will be community “canvassing” in urban cesspools, it’s not going to be door to door vaccine injections.
Keep thinking that.................
That’s what I figure, hit the urban minority neighborhoods.
And the 4473 is supposed to be destroyed 30 days after a firearms purchase. Yea, right..the FBI can go back years to find the original buyer. Now, if that form is destroyed, how do they do that?
They could wear black uniforms with red white armbands with a syringe embroidered.
>This “door to door” thing is actually impossible under the current system. Contrary to what many think, there isn’t a national database of who received the vaccine.
Let’s face it, they’re waiting for one of these vaccination squads to get shot and killed. Then the weepy tributes to how brave they are, then the ensuing laws giving them police power, then the real squads get put out there.
What is your source for this assertion? There most definitely is a digital record.
“It just doesn’t exist. It would be impossible to go door to door to every household in the United States. (Even the Census doesn’t actually do that.)”
The census takers came to our door about 3 or 4 times when we didn’t fill the long form out over 10 years ago. We filled out the regular census, but then they sent out the long form to selected households with questions that had nothing to do with a census. They even banged on the door one time when we didn’t answer. They could probably here us in the house since we had company.
Insurance companies have records of the vaccines that they paid for, so do the places that gave them. The records exist.
In certain areas no one would do it. My brother worked for the census one time. They sent him to a really bad neighborhood. He went to the building he was assigned to and just asked a kid sitting on the stoop how many people lived there.