He sets up the hypothesis: "Why 17 cases of COVID-19 on a cruise ship shouldn’t be a huge cause for concern..."
His conclusion is: "So, yes, 17 passengers and crew tested positive for COVID-19. But that’s 17 out of 3,200. In other words, only about half a percent of people on the ship (about 1 in 200) tested positive."
Shouldn't the point of it all be that there shouldn't be ANY cases on a 100% vaccinated cruise line like Norwegian?
Isn't the author glossing over that major point?
If the cruise lines go from total panic over a few cases to shrugging off a few cases, then why have the 2-day testing window, masks everywhere, and 100% vaccinated passengers?
-PJ
Shouldn't the point of it all be that there shouldn't be ANY cases on a 100% vaccinated cruise line like Norwegian?
Isn't the author glossing over that major point?
Of course, the author is pro cruise.
The problem with the experimental drugs is as vaccines- THEY DON'T WORK.
That is the reason I am still unvaccinated against covid.
I got a vaccine two weeks ago, but it was for TETANUS. -Tom