RossyG
Well-known member
- Dec 20, 2014
- 2,630
Genocide is probably the wrong word. Try euthanasia.
We have herd immunity to smallpox. Is that euthanasia?
Genocide is probably the wrong word. Try euthanasia.
We have herd immunity to smallpox. Is that euthanasia?
The smallpox vaccine eradicated smallpox. I still have the scar on my arm. My son, born in 1970 didn't have to be vaccinated because it was eradicated.
Herd immunity in itself means that we are immune either completely or to the point that it’s not too serious. That’d be a good thing.
You know how a common cold is a mere inconvenience to us yet could wipe out a remote village of eskimos? That’s because we have herd immunity and they don’t.
The fact that you liken it to genocide shows you how poorly the media have covered this (and hysteria on social media has been even worse).
Do you think having herd immunity to various diseases is a bad thing?
Yes, the vaccine created herd immunity which meant the virus had no human hosts to latch onto and it died.
No one is saying that we shouldn't create herd immunity with a COVID-19 vaccine.Yes, the vaccine created herd immunity which meant the virus had no human hosts to latch onto and it died.
How to stimulate and manage herd immunity in the case of Covid 19? One way: keep the vulnerable and elderly isolated and let the under 60s carry on as normal. After a month or two you’d have the necessary 60% plus of people with antibodies.
I will let my wife know that if she catches the virus, that dying for the good of the herd is a good thing. I am sure she will appreciate that sentiment.
One man's 'good thing' sails pretty close to being another man's 'near genocide' tho eh?
Lest we forget, herd immunity = allowing hundreds of thousands of people die while utterly swamping all available NHS resources. To be honest, as 'good things' go, I've heard better
No one is saying that we shouldn't create herd immunity with a COVID-19 vaccine.
The plan which is being criticized is the plan to create it without a vaccine.
That is too 'the ends justifies the means' for some, and a philosophy that some don't want society to subscribe to.
Hang on .... you put 40M+ 'back to normal' and think that those that die (wouldn't mind your estimate of numbers by the way) would be similar numbers to those that would have died anyway in car accidents and such like?
How many of those infected (estimate please) will require hospital and ICU treatment and how many more of our frontline medical heroes lose their lives?
Thank f**k we don't have people leading this country of similar views .... well I certainly hope not
My point was that herd immunity is herd immunity. It’s a scientific term that means we have a natural resistance.
Many people, including several in this thread, think it’s a codeword for letting the virus do its worst and the devil take the hindmost. That’s the point I was trying to make, but people still either don’t understand what I’ve said or aren’t bothering to read it and just responding to what they think I’ve said.
Not unusual on the Internet, it must be said.
The two care homes that my family and inlaws are involved with went into lockdown many weeks ago before Mothers Day, so any disease transmission is done by carers, some of whom are going from home to home.
The only way to get natural resistance is to recover from the illness, or be vaccinated. There are many many vulnerable people with asthma, COPD, those being treated for cancer, and immunosuppressant that cannot be allowed to catch it.
What do you propose to do with them? Isolate them for the rest of their lives?
A valid vaccine is many many months away. Even the flu jab which I have every October is revamped every Spring because as I said before, viruses mutate.
If we got herd immunity the way I mentioned above then hopefully the vulnerable could then return to a more normal life as transmission would be massively reduced.
And a vaccine may never come or may take many years. What do we do then?
It’s a horrible situation and whatever choice we go with people will die. But this lockdown can’t continue forever.
I agree it can't continue forever, but what is being pointed out, is that those in care homes are sitting ducks.
My sister in law was asked to sign a DNR two weeks ago, for her mother. Two years ago she got a secondary chest infection following a water infection (very common amongst the old) and developed sepsis. Basically, that means, she won't even be admitted to hospital now, because of the infections already there. Two years ago, drastic treatment saved her life, ie antibiotics straight into her heart. Now, at this time, that won't happen.
It’s a horrible situation. Ideally care homes would be isolated for a few weeks with careers living in and all Covid patients should go to specific hospitals like Nightingale while the other hospitals go back to normal as best they can.
Easier said than done, obviously.
My point was that herd immunity is herd immunity. It’s a scientific term that means we have a natural resistance.
Many people, including several in this thread, think it’s a codeword for letting the virus do its worst and the devil take the hindmost. That’s the point I was trying to make, but people still either don’t understand what I’ve said or aren’t bothering to read it and just responding to what they think I’ve said.
Not unusual on the Internet, it must be said.
You haven't read the article, have you? .