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Denninger today, in "Down To Only One Question Now..", showing "Table 2. COVID-19 cases by vaccination status between week 36 and week 39 2021", from the UK Health Security Agency:

< Unfortunately what this means is that now, for anyone over 30, you are more likely to *get infected*, yes, adjusted for the population that is vaccinated, if you *are vaccinated*.

Indeed in the 40-49 age group, you're close to double as probable, on a per-population basis....

*So far* this is not translating into higher risk of Covid hospitalization and death, on a per-100,000 basis. But, that the vaccine makes you more likely to both get and give *to others* the virus, is now established. It is fact. It is in fact true, for everyone who is *over 30*.

I have pointed out, that preventing infection was never in the cards; it was not part of the EUA, it was not part of the studies, it was never demonstrated. But this is much worse, because now we are talking about a direct *threat to others*....

But the 900lb Gorilla is, that the impairment may not (be?) Covid-19 specific. In other words, the impairment may be *immune system generalized*, in which case those who took the jabs are screwed, because that immune damage could be long-*lasting or even permanent*, yet the protection against serious outcomes is specific to Covid.

So yes, you're "safer" against a serious outcome, even while screwing everyone else, but at the same time you are wildly *more-susceptible* to a severe or fatal outcome due to, for example, *influenza*.

We don't have any data on that yet, and thus there's no way to know if that is the case. It is, however, a reasonable possibility, and the few anecdotal pieces of data from people who have run immune screens following the jabs, suggests it may indeed be the case...." >

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Two questions:

1. Since the positive effects of the vaccine wear off after 4 months or so, does this reprogramming also?

2. If you are vaccinated, and get delta, are you now immune to Covid?

Hopefully these will get answered soon.

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