queridiculo wrote:Dat2U wrote:UK has decided to treat Covid like the flu and repealed all mandates. More european countries and Japan are considering this. Hell the NFL just said screw it and stopped testing unvaxxed players. I guess they are ALL crazy too. Or maybe they are realists. You can't magically vaccine the omnicron variant out of existence. You certainly can't stop the spread with the vax. You guys talking points are outdated.
It bears noting that Boris Johnson had this to say about why he believes in easing measures:
Boris Johnson wrote:"Our scientists believe it is likely that the omicron wave has now peaked nationally ... because of the extraordinary booster campaign," Johnson said, adding that restrictions also had slowed the spread.
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C'mon now. Of course he is going to say that. He would never say: "Apparently, vaccinations are doing nothing to stop the spread of Omicron. My bad".
Fortunately, the UK posts the raw data, even if they try to obscure the true failure of the vaccine by eliminating the graphs that demonstrated the problem visually. But if you take the data and graph it yourself, you can see what's going on. I few bloggers have helpfully done so. Here is the case rate data in the UK:

Here's the case rate data from Scotland:

And here's the hospitalization data from Scotland:

Notably, even the hospitalization data shows negative vaccine effectiveness for the double-vaxxed. The boosters seem to be helping some, but there is the data artifact that I discussed in the Covid thread where the booster jab temporarily reduces your immunity, and the post-jab infections over the next 2 weeks get charged to the double vaxed. The reality is that the boosted probably aren't doing quite as well as depicted and the double-vaxxed are doing a little better.
Comparing the case rates of the heaviest vaccinated countries in Europe to the least vaccinated is also illustrative. Here's a case rate graph of the 3 most boosted countries in Europe: Gibraltar, Iceland, Israel (not Europe, but good data), versus the 3 of the least boosted countries in Europe: Russia, Georgia, and Belarus.
