I think that the more likely scenario is the opposite. Vaccinated people have an artificially introduced agent that attacks the original virus construction (I guess called 'alpha' Covid), thus this will drive mutations of different variations of the alpha Covid (e.g., beta, gamma, delta, etc). The original alpha Covid would just go after the un-vaccinated. And I'd suspect that the un-vaccinated survivors (99.9% of those exposed to the virus) would have a broader set of anti-bodies that could handle the variants better than those that were loaded up with artificial antibodies.
That is completely wrong, and here’s why:
In a vaccinated person, if a virus bunch is breathed in, the virus is attacked and neutralized. All of them, mutated and unmutated. There is still a much smaller percentage of vaccinated people actually getting the virus than the unvaccinated.
In an unvaccinated person, any group of viruses is free to set up house and mutate, with only the person’s natural immunity to fight them. When one virion happens to find the right combination to greater contagiousness, it becomes dangerous as it replicates and is breathed out by the ill person.
Voila. New variant, if it gets to even one other person, who then spreads it to others.
Under lockdown, by the way, it never gets to another person, unless maybe to the people who cart the sick person off to the hospial.
I’m going to post something in a few minutes about how powerful people who hate our country are paying people to spread the opposite of the truth. I’ll ping you.