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RE: A response to @chron: Why you should believe in Herd Immunity!

in #health7 years ago

Incidentally, the title of your post contains "why you should believe in herd immunity." Can you please at least acknowledge that you have absolutely no evidence that herd immunity could reasonably work. Could you please acknowledge that, as i've pointed out, the likelihood that any populations anywhere in the world have ever reached anywhere near the vaccine coverage range that is said to achieve herd immunity is logically extremely low. You might retract your statement at least until such time as you have evidence to support the claim, especially when calling out @chron so articulately :)

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I will reply in more detail since I am in a train now and don't have much time...

the title of your post contains "why you should believe in herd immunity."

True, it contains the word believe. Believe, not prove. Otherwise it would be "The facts why herd immunity works!"

This post was never made to prove anything.

It was mainly made to show @chron and the many users who agreed with him, that their argument of "tourism makes herd immunity not working" was based on a big logical error and I wanted to correct that.

You were absolutely right to point out the logical flaws in @chron's post. But your arguments for why people should believe in herd immunity were also flawed. That's why I question the title....because you are asking people to believe in herd immunity, which sadly and provably, does not exist.

Actually, @theaustrianguy was incorrect, and @chron was correct.

Every one of the tourists is an unknown regarding vaccination, and therefore needs to be counted as unvaccinated for the purpose of calculating herd immunity.

Every one of them could have dropped off a disease upon their visit, so they were all potential vectors, that decreased the immunity of the herd in direct proportion to their numbers.

However, they aren't members of the herd at all, they don't stay. Their number cannot be added to the herd.

Their impact compromises the immunity of the herd, but their transitory nature means they cannot be considered a part of the herd.

@chron was correct from the get go, and the good doctor wrong.

Answered to those things above.