Full FDA approval and testing before the first shot was injected into a citizen. That would require full human trials and working out these adverse effects we're seeing (blood clots, heart swelling, etc). Roll these out the same way we've done vaccines in the past. Most importantly, the entire risk framing would have to had never been, as the response to covid (shutdowns, mask mandates, etc) was grossly overwhelming compared to what the data was showing; that covid had a 90% mortality rate for those over 65, but far less for those under 65.Bottomline, I've got big red question marks regarding the long-term effects of spike proteins. We shall see what happens.
The CDC has a handy guide on how the vaccine works.
Understanding mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines
These vaccines (at least the US approved ones) went through the same standards all vaccines needed to. COVID-19 moved significantly quicker for several reasons.
One was they were already working on coronavirus vaccines so they already had a plan on what needed to get done. Just like the flu vaccine having a new one come out every year. They know what they need to do, just fine tune it for that year’s most likely flu virus.
Two, the money was there, Trump pouring money into it made companies jump at doing this, guaranteed buys whether it worked or not meant the companies weren’t going to end up pouring money into a product they couldn’t sell.
Three, the companies and government went through the bureaucratic stuff while the trials were going on. Usually things are done one at a time, this they moved along by doing things simultaneously that could be done.
Four, they ran multiple studies simultaneously. They didn’t wait for one to finish before starting the next one on situations like changing the dosage or timing of the dosage. They got the next one moving right away.
Five, they could do this because they had a plethora of test subjects. Usually they have a hard time getting enough subjects for these trials. They had to turn people down for these. My wife and I both signed up and got turned down.
It's not what the government should have done, but what they should have NOT done. The actions of governors sending sick patients into nursing homes was really telling. That was and IS a huge red flag. I don't think Cuomo and Whittmer were so incompetent that they truly believed that was an okay idea.
I agree placing sick patients in nursing homes wasn’t a good idea and retroactively was possibly the worst decision to make in that situation.
Framing how they're "acting" implies intent and motive. I wanted to counter that position.
Maybe there is intent and motive. Maybe there isn’t. I’m convinced some people are sick of waiting for the end of the world and are trying to push it along. Actions speak louder than words. I can say I’m not a Green Bay Packers fan all I want, but if I go to Lambeau Field on Sundays in fall while wearing a green jersey and yelling “Go Pack Go” people aren’t going to believe when I say I’m not a Packers fan. People can say they don’t want people to get sick but when they refuse to take actions to prevent them from getting sick, I don’t believe what they say.