Saginaw Bay Area - Michigan | ccjersey - 6/11/2021 20:24
and vaccinated people will neither spread the virus or contract the virus, very often
ccjersey - 6/11/2021 21:38
OK 1 in 600 and everyone’s vaccinated so chances of transmission are very low.
ccjersey - 6/11/2021 22:11
If you don’t want any chance of an outbreak in a setting, just require vaccination before entry.
And the purpose of requiring _this_ vaccine is what again?
If my question seems to be in a circle, I'm just trying to keep up with you...
Here's your logic:
It's OK for the cruise line to require vaccination so nobody can catch or share covid, but they still do catch and share covid, but it is OK because they are vaccinated and probably won't get very sick, unless they do, but it will be OK, because they probable won't die, unless they do.
And if you let unvaccinated people on there with all those vaccinated people, what would change?
That's right, they probably won't catch or share covid, probably won't get very sick and probably won't die.
In the situation in question, 2 people tested positive. They caught or were shared with after disembarking as they tested negative prior to then. They were in the same room. One probably got it, then shared it with the other. That pretty much flies against your idea of _this_ vaccine being able to stop "any chance of an outbreak".
Edited by 2TrakR 6/11/2021 21:29
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