Another Way Of Looking At It ?

Before I get to the meat of this piece, I want to relate two similar situations with two separate individuals, 

Both of these individuals had received every Covid booster, and seemed a bit taken aback that they recently got Covid. Both basically said, “I had every recommended booster, and yet I got Covid.” It is interesting that both of these individuals are politically extremely liberal. Is there a correlation between being liberal and receiving every recommended Covid booster? Hmmm!  Perhaps a topic for another day.

Eerily my situation almost two years ago was a bit similar. Back then my wife and I were going back to the Chicago area for a wedding. Because on that trip, we were also planning on visiting my wife’s sister who was quite ill, we thought that it would be prudent to get a Covid booster, and so we did. Fifteen days after I got my booster, I came down with Covid. My question back then was, “Did the booster contribute to my getting Covid?” It was then, and still is now, my opinion that getting Covid within fifteen days of a Covid booster was not merely a coincidence. I suspect there was a cause-effect relationship. I guess perhaps I should further consider whether or not the Covid infection that these two separate acquaintances got, despite having had all the boosters, was, in fact, caused by or contributed to, by the boosters.

While I can hear rumblings of “poppycock” from some of you readers, first consider the following stats from Canada.

From the People’s Voice:

During the month of February, 2022 in Canada, there were many more cases of Covid among the double vaccinated and triple vaccinated population when compared to the unvaccinated. Why should this be considering that the vaccine allegedly reduced their risk of contracting Covid-19?

Perhaps there is another way of looking at it. 

Could it be that the Covid-19 vaccines damage the immune system and make recipients more likely to contract Covid-19?  Could it be that the vaccine effectiveness isn’t really a measure of a vaccine, but rather a measure of a vaccine-recipient’s immune system performance compared to the immune system performance of an unvaccinated person.

.Could that explain why these two different acquaintances recently got Covid despite the fact that they each had received “all of the recommended boosters?” Hmmm!

10/25/23

californiacontrarian