That shit right there is stupid. Well... I guess the more stupid  part is how hard you are clutching those pearls. Sure seems the vaxxers  are having a bad time finding a  narrative that will hold up for more  than a day or two. Must be really frustrating.
Hey  I feel your pain. Here is yet another article showing how your  narrative is crumbling faster than a sandcastle during high tide from  The WSJ. Though the other articles out this week are even more  devastating to your pearl clutching ways. 
Most  of the covid deaths included 4-6 commodities, prompting the CDC to say:  "Those people were unwell". I guess that's a new agey medical term. Not  to mention that the vaxx for the latest variant (Omicron) won't be  available for another 3-4 months and the vaxxxed are essentially  super-spreaders. Oh and that new variant or two? Oops! Just a lab cross  contamination error.
Omicron Makes Biden’s Vaccine Mandates Obsolete
There is no evidence so far that vaccines are reducing infections from the fast-spreading variant.
By Luc Montagnier and Jed Rubenfeld
Jan. 9, 2022 5:20 pm ET 
 Federal  courts considering the Biden administration’s vaccination  mandates—including the Supreme Court at Friday’s oral argument—have  focused on administrative-law issues. The decrees raise constitutional  issues as well. But there’s a simpler reason the justices should stay  these mandates: the rise of the Omicron variant.
 It would be  irrational, legally indefensible and contrary to the public interest for  government to mandate vaccines absent any evidence that the vaccines  are effective in stopping the spread of the pathogen they target. Yet  that’s exactly what’s happening here.
Both mandates—from the  Health and Human Services Department for healthcare workers and the  Occupational Safety and Health Administration for large employers in  many other industries—were issued Nov. 5. At that time, the Delta  variant represented almost all U.S. Covid-19 cases, and both agencies  appropriately considered Delta at length and in detail, finding that the  vaccines remained effective against it.
 Those findings are now  obsolete. As of Jan. 1, Omicron represented more than 95% of U.S. Covid  cases, according to estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and  Prevention. Because some of Omicron’s 50 mutations are known to evade  antibody protection, because more than 30 of those mutations are to the  spike protein used as an immunogen by the existing vaccines, and because  there have been mass Omicron outbreaks in heavily vaccinated  populations, scientists are highly uncertain the existing vaccines can  stop it from spreading. As the CDC put it on Dec. 20, “we don’t yet know  . . . how well available vaccines and medications work against it.”
 The  Supreme Court held in Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905) that the right  to refuse medical treatment could be overcome when society needs to curb  the spread of a contagious epidemic. At Friday’s oral argument, all the  justices acknowledged that the federal mandates rest on this rationale.  But mandating a vaccine to stop the spread of a disease requires  evidence that the vaccines will prevent infection or transmission  (rather than efficacy against severe outcomes like hospitalization or  death). As the World Health Organization puts it, “if mandatory  vaccination is considered necessary to interrupt transmission chains and  prevent harm to others, there should be sufficient evidence that the  vaccine is efficacious in preventing serious infection and/or  transmission.” For Omicron, there is as yet no such evidence.
The  little data we have suggest the opposite. One preprint study found that  after 30 days the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines no longer had any  statistically significant positive effect against Omicron infection, and  after 90 days, their effect went negative—i.e., vaccinated people were  more susceptible to Omicron infection. Confirming this negative efficacy  finding, data from Denmark and the Canadian province of Ontario  indicate that vaccinated people have higher rates of Omicron infection  than unvaccinated people.
Meantime, it has long been known that  vaccinated people with breakthrough infections are highly contagious,  and preliminary data from all over the world indicate that this is true  of Omicron as well. As CDC Director Rochelle Walensky put it last  summer, the viral load in the noses and throats of vaccinated people  infected with Delta is “indistinguishable” from that of unvaccinated  people, and “what [the vaccines] can’t do anymore is prevent  transmission.”
There is some early evidence that boosters may  reduce Omicron infections, but the effect appears to wane quickly, and  we don’t know if repeated boosters would be an effective response to the  surge of Omicron. That depends among other things on the severity of  disease Omicron causes, another great unknown. According to the CDC, the  overwhelming majority of symptomatic U.S. Omicron cases have been mild.  The best policy might be to let Omicron run its course while protecting  the most vulnerable, naturally immunizing the vast majority against  Covid through infection by a relatively benign strain. As Sir Andrew  Pollard, head of the U.K.’s Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation,  said in a recent interview, “We can’t vaccinate the planet every four or  six months. It’s not sustainable or affordable.”
In any event,  the vaccine mandates before the court don’t require boosters. They  define “fully vaccinated” as two doses of Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech or  one dose of Johnson & Johnson.
Even if boosters would help, the  mandates would leave tens or hundreds of thousands of unboosted  employees on the job, who have zero or negative protection against  Omicron infection, and who would be highly contagious if they become  infected. In other words, there is no scientific basis for believing  these mandates will curb the spread of the disease.
Omicron was  mentioned sparsely at Friday’s oral argument, but the  justices—particularly those most favorable to the mandates—appeared to  labor under drastically false assumptions. Justice Stephen Breyer  suggested that if mandatory vaccination went forward, that would prevent  all new Covid infections—750,000 new cases every day, he said. This is  wildly false. So is Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s assertion that “we have  over 100,000 children . . . in serious condition, many on ventilators.”  According to Health and Human Services Department data, there are  currently fewer than 3,500 confirmed pediatric Covid hospitalizations,  and that includes patients who tested positive and were hospitalized for  other reasons.
It is axiomatic in U.S. law that courts don’t  uphold agency directives when the agency has entirely failed to consider  facts crucial to the problem. In many contexts courts send regulations  back to the agency for reconsideration in light of dramatically changed  circumstances. If the agency’s action “is not sustainable on the record  itself, the proper judicial approach has been to vacate the action and  to remand the matter back to the agency for further consideration,” as  the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia put it.
 Neither  HHS nor OSHA ever considered Omicron or said a word about vaccine  efficacy against it, for the simple reason that it hadn’t yet been  discovered. In these circumstances, longstanding legal principles  require the justices to stay the mandates and send them back to the  agencies for a fresh look.
 Dr. Montagnier was a winner of the  2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering the human  immunodeficiency virus. Mr. Rubenfeld is a constitutional scholar. 
	
		
		This one should be easy to fill in, but I'll go first.
 
 Anti-Vax Leader Urges Followers to Drink Their Own Urine to Fight COVID
 https://www.thedailybeast.com/anti-v...fight-covid-19
Anti-COVID-19 “Vaccine Police” leader Christopher Key   has a new quarter-baked conspiracy theory for his anti-vax followers  to  use to cure themselves of COVID-19: Drink their own urine. “The  antidote that we have seen now, and we have tons and tons of research,   is urine therapy. OK, and I know to a lot of you this sounds crazy,  but  guys, God’s given us everything we need,” Key said in a video  posted  over the weekend on his Telegram account after being released  from jail  over a trespassing charge.   “This has been around for centuries,” he added. “When I tell you this,   please take it with a grain of salt,” the anti-vaccine advocate warned   while saying people might now think he is “cray cray.” “Now drink  urine!”  he continued. “This vaccine is the worst bioweapon I have ever  seen,”  he concluded. “I drink my own urine!” Reached for comment by The  Daily  Beast on Sunday night, Key doubled down on what he calls “urine   therapy” and railed against “foolish” people who took the COVID-19   vaccine, which is safe and effective.
I think they just like being in the open with their piss fetish.   Clearly he gets his research the same place Josey and Salty do.
 Originally Posted by TechPapi
		Originally Posted by TechPapi