Name something that may keep your family from gathering during the holidays.
A. Unequally yoked
B. Bad weather
C. The Tribulation
D. Inflation
E. Covid-19
All fun and games aside, I have to answer Covid-19, specifically vaccines.
A majority of vaccinated Americans do not want unvaccinated relatives attending their holiday parties, and almost half have cut off family members over their vaccination status, according to a new poll.
According to a survey of 2,000 Americans conducted by OnePoll this month, 63% of those vaccinated against Covid-19 “don’t feel comfortable” allowing their unvaccinated relatives to attend their holiday parties, while 58% have completely broken contact with family members who refuse the jab.
This year I wanted to spend Thanksgiving with family I have not seen in years, including my 97 year old grandmother, but due to our vaccine status as mostly unvaccinated except me, they are not wanting us to see my grandmother despite her offering her home for us to stay.
All of them have been vaccinated but yet according to research,
The researchers, who detailed their findings in a paper by the prestigious Oxford University Clinical Research Group published Aug. 10 in The Lancet, found that while the jab moderates symptoms of infection, it also allows vaccinated individuals to carry unusually high viral loads without becoming ill at first, potentially transforming them into pre-symptomatic superspreaders.
So basically just as or more contagious than the unvaccinated.
Here are your only options if you fear Covid.
1. Get vaccinated (lesser severity of symptoms)
2. Shelter in place until you die.
3. Wear a respirator with filters for viruses (cloth masks do almost nothing, and the N95 in a lab setting only gives between 40% to 60% protection).
That is your only option because vaccinating people will not stop the spread of the virus.
So let us not discriminate between family members.
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