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Again, your claim:
How can you claim the above, without them getting tested? Those with the covid vaccine are still able to contract and spread the virus. You are spreading false data based on an assumption.
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Out of curiosity, how many of them have been tested after receiving the vaccine? Have any of them been tested within the past 2 months?
None. No symptoms = no reason to get tested, or so say my wife's PCP and our provider's FAQ.
I think I can surmise the motivation for your question, and think vaccinated people should be systematically tested in order to get data. Testing resources are not unlimited.
Again, your claim:
Quoted:
Among several dozen people in my family and circle of friends who I know have been vaccinated, none has contracted COVID-19. Zero.
How can you claim the above, without them getting tested? Those with the covid vaccine are still able to contract
and spread the virus. You are spreading false data based on an assumption.
COVID-19 is a disease. If a person has no symptoms, i.e. is not sick, that person does not have the disease called COVID-19.
The possibility that the person is carrying and even spreading the SARS-CoV-2 virus is another question. Whether and how much of a problem that really is can only be determined by controlled research, not by random people walking in and asking to be tested.
Saying "Those with the covid vaccine are still able to contract and spread the virus" is kind of like the warnings they give teenagers in sex education classes: "Even if you use a condom during sex there is still a chance that a pregnancy can result or an STD can be transmitted."
Sure, it's possible, but that doesn't make it an all-or-nothing issue, and it doesn't mean that condoms are of no value in preventing pregnancy or STDs. The failure rate of condoms can be specified as a percentage. The same should be done for the rate at which vaccinated people supposedly carry and spread the virus.