dckingsfan wrote:And taking it to its logical conclusion. Let's assume 30% of folks in the US take zero vaccines going forward. Guess what, vaccines are most effective when everyone takes them.
Vaccines have approximately doubled our life expectancy. Shall we go back to those days?
When the vaccine is an effective inoculant: yes
When it isnt, as in this case: self-selection of, and continuous emergence of, vaccine-immunity escaping variants
Give it 3 months, they'll be blaming brand new mega-outbreaks among the majority of the vaccinated on the non-vaccinated, and say its their fault for not getting vaccinated. That isnt how it works. That isnt how evolution works anywhere especially in the realm of rapidly evolving RNA-viruses. We have seen how rapidly this one evolves, there seems to be a new variant on the watch list every month.
We can also see the effect of leaky vaccines on viral evolution. There are a number of scientific studies into vaccine-driven evolution of coronaviruses in livestock, including infectious bronchitis virus in poultry which has been (attempted to be) controlled via vaccination with no success due to self selection for immune escape. Its also worth noting that the SARS virus (SARS-Covid-1) has never had a successful vaccine developed for it - we are just lucky the case to death rate was so high in that virus that it disappeared on its own.