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The anti vaxxers are arguing that there's no point in them being pressurised into getting vaccinated, because it's only themselves they're putting at risk.
Would (calling it "population immunity" or "public immunity") have been accepted, as a concept, and so perhaps, have avoided the lock-downs?
What we don't know is whether the case numbers will drop to essentially zero over the summer
It's just a matter of getting the words right.
The Labour Party under JC couldn't agree to implement the result of a referendum without having another one,
and the man himself, having campaigned to put his finger on the nuclear button, couldn't say whether he would press it or scrap it
Quote from: charles1948 on 25/05/2021 18:07:46 It's just a matter of getting the words right.No, it's not.The problem with "herd immunity" isn't the use of a word commonly used for animals.The problem with herd immunity is the massive death toll if you try to do it without a vaccine- as Boris was planning to do.Changing the name doesn't save any lives.
The question of whether more lives would've been saved by letting the Covid virus run its natural course, instead of desperately trying to fend it off by inventing vaccines and locking down entire countries, will only be answered in the future.
Quote from: charles1948 on 25/05/2021 18:35:15The question of whether more lives would've been saved by letting the Covid virus run its natural course, instead of desperately trying to fend it off by inventing vaccines and locking down entire countries, will only be answered in the future.No.Letting the virus run riot would kill essentially all the susceptible people.Any policy which saves any of them is better.Of course, in the long run, everybody dies, so it's a meaningless way to look at it..
It's meaningless. Because in the long run, as you say, all the people will end up dead anyway.