More than 90 % of children in the US have had Covid at least once at this point. So we agree that children who have had Covid don't need to get vaccinated. Can you please provide evidence or the reasoning behind the bolded suggestion? Also, if you are immunocompromised and still survived an infection, can you please explain from a medical perspective what additional benefit a vaccination on top of an infection you survived is meant to bring?
Lol, probably the only thing we'd agree on. Edit... Ironically, I doubt he knows what the word means even though he is the definition of one.
I have already stated my opinion on child vaccination pretty clearly. Infection isn't always the same. Sometimes, you can be infected with a large "dose" of the virus, and sometimes you can get a small "dose". Your immune system won't learn and become as robust with a weak infection. Vaccination has a controlled dose. For example, if you decide to be vaccinated against a virus that requires 30mcg (adult version) but only take 5mcg (child version), you're unlikely to develop as robust protection.
Florida to allow death penalty with 8-4 jury vote instead of unanimously Pretty fked up in DeSantis land.
@AroundTheWorld has the Miami Mind Virus. We need to get him to Houston so his mind can recover. Or even San Antonio with its big ol women.
I read somewhere a few years ago (pre-pandemic) that 60k New Yorkers a year retire to Florida. Thats 15k per quarter. Based on this tweet and rationale, DeSantis is doing something wrong if FL is losing 33% of the average retirees from NY.
That would assume that everyone changes their driver's license, which is unlikely. Anyway, that tweet was more for entertainment and to trrrrrrrigggggeeerrrr some of y'all lol
Another alternative is that 40% less New Yorkers have switched to Florida licenses in 1Q 2023 than in 1Q 2022.