Good… the FDA is doing its job in this instance. I’m not sure that Prfizer’s vaccine is losing some of its efficacy because of the lapse of time or just because it’s simply not as effective against the Delta variant. The Mayo Clinic study showed that the Pfizer vaccine was 42% effective (compared to unvaccinated individuals) at preventing detectable infections once Delta became dominant while Moderna still retained 76% efficacy in the same time period. That might mean that Pfizer is simply less effective against Delta regardless of the recency of vaccination so a third shot might not offer much improvement.
Fortunately both vaccines continue to offer good protection against Delta when it comes to hospitalization and death.
▁ ▂ ▄ ▅ ▆ ▇ █ [G̲̅][o̲̅][o̲̅][d̲̅] [f̲̅][o̲̅][r̲̅] [T̲̅][h̲̅][e̲̅][e̲̅] [B̲̅][u̲̅][t̲̅] [n̲̅][o̲̅][t̲̅] [f̲̅][o̲̅][r̲̅] [M̲̅][e̲̅][~̲̅][!̲̅] █ ▇ ▆ ▅ ▄ ▂ ▁
Actually, they don’t. Every day I read some horror story of what all these shots do to people
Who can say? You said something, but it carries no weight, as far as I’m concerned. Plenty of people are dead who’ve been injected. Plenty of people have recovered who have not. The kill-rate of the disease is low, and it certainly depends on the care received. Statements like yours can be easily made and mean nothing.
This is not a “vaccine”. It does not do anything the Polio vaccine did, and those behind it have changed the definition of “vaccine” to pretend that it is one.