Let’s make a list:
1) If it is an artificial virus, and it probably is, then there is not only no natural immunity, but immunity developed by an immune system designed for natural infections likely won’t work.
2) Testing employees as a sample of a population is not valid because it is the old who are at risk, and they aren’t working anymore. Getting great results with no elderly in the sample means nothing. That’s like celebrating a low pregnancy rate among a sample consisting of all males.
3) There is a perpetual hand wave over heads about elderly PLUS comorbidity. Hypertension is a comorbidity, treated or not. 75% of all people over age 65 have hypertension. To that add diabetes. And of course dementia. So there’s really no point of “elderly PLUS comorbidity”. Elderly IS a comorbidity.
4) Roughly 20-25% more elderly died last year of all causes than the average of 4 previous years. Many did not dare go to a doc for fear of infection, which means delayed discovery of problems, and also avoided misdiagnoses leading to incorrect treatment. Note also the 20-25% number is substantially higher than the 65+ Covid death count, suggesting the old codger living alone who did not seek testing died of covid, was gathered up from the smell weeks later. He’s a Covid death that was never counted.
eople who need eople are the luckiest eople in the world.
Re: being elderly IS a co-morbidity
To class everyone over a certain age as anything, let alone, as having a co-morbidity, is ignorant, insulting, and statistically unfounded.
News flash - most of us healthy oldsters put more than half of those under 60 to shame, as a good percentage of them would love to have our blood pressure, heart rate, and other indicators of good health.
Any chance you’ll apologize for being an ass?