Comments by "Orionishi" (@orionishi6737) on "Transatlantic data burst" video.

  1. 3
  2. 3
  3. 3
  4. 2
  5. 2
  6. 2
  7. 2
  8. 1
  9. 1
  10. 1
  11. 1
  12. 1
  13. 1
  14. 1
  15. 1
  16. 1
  17.  @o4pureh2o  And I have found the kicker. That isn't the full amount of information...once again, y'alls motto, out of context. The unvaccinated, as it's labeled in that particular data, are only the people that are completely unknown...the vaccinated and unvaccinated that are accounted for in the Australian pop. are grouped together. There is apparently another report that breaks that group of the pop. down further into vaccinated and unvaccinated, the different vaccines they got, the amount of boosters and so on. Also, it is not accounting for the data on age of deaths, other underlying factors and the amount of people that are vaccinated. The higher amount of deaths is happening at majority in older at risk groups who were vaccinated. Not every day people living their lives. Basically, because everybody there is vaccinated, the people who are frail and old or already sick who then catch it still, are counted as vaccinated. It's a statistic that was expected to go up once everybody was vaccinated...because you know people are still going to die from things. I know y'all think when they claim that vaccines help stop infection they mean individually... that's not what they mean. Vaccines don't stop infection like that. They slow the spread of it by giving people immunity so that they aren't sick and contagious for as long a period of time. Which stops as many people from being infected... especially since y'all can't just stay home when you are sick or at least wear a mask when you go in public and might have something....cause we both know you kept going out and about, even before Covid when it was just the flu...you are definitely the type. You don't have to fear monger....the actual truth is out there...this is why large sets of data being cherry picked out of context is misleading and dangerous.
    1
  18. 1
  19. 1
  20. 1
  21. 1
  22. 1
  23. 1
  24. 1
  25. 1
  26. 1
  27. 1
  28. 1
  29. 1
  30. 1
  31. 1
  32. 1
  33. 1
  34. 1
  35. 1
  36. 1
  37. 1
  38. 1