I'm sorry to say that.
In one of the last outbreaks in Yugoslavia a man who was vaccinated contracted small pox, did have a fever and aches, a low level form of the disease, but he recovered without even knowing he had had small pox.
His case, where he had no idea he had the disease, ended up causing about 250 cases, including a number of fatal ones.
That was 1972 in Yugoslavia.
You were correct that there would be symptoms of one sort or another, but your discussion is seriously lacking in substance or analysis.
That is utterly laughable coming from someone who has yet to post a reference. Everything I've said is backed up by text from the major health organizations of the world.
That was 1972 in Yugoslavia.
You mean Tito's Yugoslovia? Well there's a credible source. Yep, no CYA going on over there.....
Was the smallpox outbreak anything like the last Anthrax outbreak? It occurred in the Soviet Union when a release occurred at a bioweapons factory.
For years the Soviet government blamed it on "eating contaminated beef", so they wouldn't give away the bioweapons lab.
In one of the last outbreaks in Yugoslavia
Strange you pick "one of the last" outbreaks, one that looks especially bad, when we have more recent data. I posted it before, but I'll post it again:
The researchers cite the last case of naturally occurring smallpox in October 1977 as further evidence of the difficulty for one person to infect others. Of the 161 persons who had contact with the infected person, 12 unvaccinated persons had face-to-face contact. None of the 12 became ill with clinical cases of smallpox.