brad465
Established Member
It's been discussed to death here of course, but repeated doses makes vaccine passports untenable, regardless of their effectiveness in reducing transmission. If the WHO do declare the pandemic over and they or any other measure are still in place, then not only has Covid won, but anyone labelled as a conspiracy theorist for criticising passports has also won.That is insane. I can kind of see if no jabs at all (however I don't agree with that), but a 20/30/40yr old could have had two jabs and COVID, and would have a perfectly set up immune system for it, yet be denied access to these things. And it makes not a blind bit of difference to transmission and outcomes.
Surely this is not a good use of NHS resources?
The go to solution when things don't work seems to be to "do more of it", rather than "maybe we're not above nature after all and have limits". This was the case with covid restrictions, now it's the case with vaccines.
A small part of me wishes a vaccine still hadn't been discovered/deployed yet, or had been found but took until at least Delta had emerged to do so. While they're beneficial, waiting longer without a vaccine would have led to more questions about the sustainability of our pandemic strategy, and a third lockdown in the UK and much of Europe would have been very hard to take in. This would also have prevented/greatly delayed the ability to put all the blame on those who've not taken a vaccine, even though in this country it's less than 10% of the eligible population.