So there is a PDF of a slide show from Humetrix on the falling "effectiveness" of the "vaccines". I downloaded a copy because we know that stuff gets "disappeared". But while it's up there are some important things in it. Screenshots of slides I think are important:
So this is a study of the most vulnerable groups.
So first VE is "vaccine effectiveness". Not that I think you're dumb but just want to be clear.
So just to be clear, that the hospitalization rate dropped by 1/3, that rate is damn high for a "vaccine". In my opinion, a "vaccine" which that level of hospitalization is a total failure.
Apparently, the person who made this slide overlooked that a drop from 32% to 21% is not a "three-fold" reduction but is a "one-third" reduction. That noted, note that the ICU care line admits that ICU care remains *unchanged* from the March-Dec 2020 timeframe.
That would be a fail.
And while the death rate for this group is, by that data, 1/3 of the March-Dec time frame, it's still high for a supposed vaccine. Can you imagine if 4% of people who took the polio vaccine still got polio AND were paralyzed?
71% of Covid cases were in "fully vaccinated individuals".
First: I think they need to stop saying 'fully vaccinated" because clearly, this is not a vaccine.
Second: I showed this using hospitalization data in earlier posts.
Gonna be a long winter for some people who think they are in the clear cause they took the shot(s).
"Age has a minor contribution to the reduced vaccine protection."
Agreed. I've been saying for months now that this is an issue of co-morbidities and that the reason severity tracks with age is because many of these often self-inflicted co-morbidities show themselves and take a higher toll as you age. So it *looks* like age but it's not.
Now here's the absolute nuclear bomb:
Notice that persons with prior-Covid-19 infections are the ONLY group that shows a lowered odd of having Delta infection. Now I'm not clear as to whether these persons had COVID *and also* took the shot(s). But even if they did the change in odds of hospitalization (and downstream deaths) is HUGE.
The second group of interest is those with Asthma. What do they do that normal healthy people do not? They regularly inhale steroids to address asthmatic attacks. It's clear then that the use of inhaled steroids helps. Why isn't the public made aware of this? Why aren't people who have been diagnosed given those steroids as outpatient early-stage treatment?
I'll leave you to think of the answer.