probinson
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It's not "my story". If you're incapable of clicking the link and reading Pfizer's press release about the study, that's on you. The bottom line is that the vaccine approval was based on a relative risk reduction in prevented infections. Yet you're trying to tell me that no one ever said vaccines would prevent infections, which is complete and utter nonsense.Quote the line that backs your story.
Here's just one example from Johns Hopkins (emphasis added);
As more and more people are vaccinated, the virus will have fewer people to infect, and community transmission will go down.
I'm a Healthy Young Person. Why Should I Get a COVID Vaccine? | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
The clear implication here is that vaccinated people do not get COVID.I'm a Healthy Young Person. Why Should I Get a COVID Vaccine? | Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Anyone old enough to remember the nonsensical claim that this was a "pandemic of the unvaccinated"? Again, the clear implication here was that vaccinated people did not get COVID. Heck, the President of the United States came right out and said, "You're not going to get COVID if you have these vaccinations."
You're not fooling anyone (except maybe yourself?) by pretending like vaccines weren't sold as a way to prevent infection. It was only when it became completely undeniable that vaccinated people were contracting COVID at the same rate as unvaccinated people that there was a pivot to talking about severe disease.
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