Omicron

How do we pronounce it

  • Om-i-cron

    Votes: 9 47.4%
  • O-micron

    Votes: 7 36.8%
  • Omnicrom, because that's what I heard them say it.

    Votes: 3 15.8%

  • Total voters
    19

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
First time in history Denver had no snow by December first

But climate issues are a hoax ...i mean fake news :roll:
especially when your Free as Fuck..DOJ?

they're afraid he'll unleash his monsters into their quiet suburban neighborhoods.

as it is now you can carry and kill with an AR for someone throwing a plastic bag at you..SUSTAINED!!!
 
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schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I always yelled out 30 grams in an oz to drum up business. My bags were fatter...and packaged in craft bags like on TV. We all had the same weed, so had to distinguish.

Like 20 kids all selling the exact same weed that came from the same main dude.
i used to deliver mine in the small mason jars to keep product fresh as fresh can be..the kids went nuts..i know it adds to the bottom line but one referral takes care of added expense.
 

Snoopy808

Well-Known Member
Wow you're a moron. If it turns out infections from it are rising because it evades protection from the vaccine and prior infections that's a bad thing moron. That means we starting over with a new vaccine and the people with previous infections don't have protection either. Maybe you should just shut the fuck up.
One trusts the "science" brought to you by Pfizer. The other trusts the "science" brought to us by decades of research and study.
Just curious but do you know how the mutation for evasion likely happens? In ill, compromised, fully jabbed patients. With a long term lingering illness. Not at all likely to happen in unjabbed individuals.
This could be a blessing because this may take the same route of the coronavirus' life cycle as in bats. That is little to no symptoms from infection for the vast majority of the population but with age and comorbidities possibly severe or fatal. In other words it will very likely attenuate to be nothing more than an illness like a cold or mild flu.
Think long game. Trust the virologists, molecular biologists and evolutionary biologists who have made this case from decades of research. Only catch to that is the introduction of inadequate vaccines, that may delay or change the viruses direction from less severe to more severe.
There's a long history of the inability to treat coronavirus of any kind with good vaccines. Foremost reason is coronavirus' are not easily susceptible to vaccine therapies like the traditional virus we have vaccines for, not even comparable to influenza vaccines either. Its their inherent genetic makeup that makes the evasive buggers.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
PJ believes this variant is a good thing, he's a fucking moron. Looks like if you had covid previously you won't have protection against Omi.


 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
One trusts the "science" brought to you by Pfizer. The other trusts the "science" brought to us by decades of research and study.
Just curious but do you know how the mutation for evasion likely happens? In ill, compromised, fully jabbed patients. With a long term lingering illness. Not at all likely to happen in unjabbed individuals.
This could be a blessing because this may take the same route of the coronavirus' life cycle as in bats. That is little to no symptoms from infection for the vast majority of the population but with age and comorbidities possibly severe or fatal. In other words it will very likely attenuate to be nothing more than an illness like a cold or mild flu.
Think long game. Trust the virologists, molecular biologists and evolutionary biologists who have made this case from decades of research. Only catch to that is the introduction of inadequate vaccines, that may delay or change the viruses direction from less severe to more severe.
There's a long history of the inability to treat coronavirus of any kind with good vaccines. Foremost reason is coronavirus' are not easily susceptible to vaccine therapies like the traditional virus we have vaccines for, not even comparable to influenza vaccines either. Its their inherent genetic makeup that makes the evasive buggers.
likely.
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
One trusts the "science" brought to you by Pfizer. The other trusts the "science" brought to us by decades of research and study.
Just curious but do you know how the mutation for evasion likely happens? In ill, compromised, fully jabbed patients. With a long term lingering illness. Not at all likely to happen in unjabbed individuals.
This could be a blessing because this may take the same route of the coronavirus' life cycle as in bats. That is little to no symptoms from infection for the vast majority of the population but with age and comorbidities possibly severe or fatal. In other words it will very likely attenuate to be nothing more than an illness like a cold or mild flu.
Think long game. Trust the virologists, molecular biologists and evolutionary biologists who have made this case from decades of research. Only catch to that is the introduction of inadequate vaccines, that may delay or change the viruses direction from less severe to more severe.
There's a long history of the inability to treat coronavirus of any kind with good vaccines. Foremost reason is coronavirus' are not easily susceptible to vaccine therapies like the traditional virus we have vaccines for, not even comparable to influenza vaccines either. Its their inherent genetic makeup that makes the evasive buggers.
mRNA is a game changer. Your last sentences do not apply.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Starting to look like the vaccine merry go round is beginning. If the vaccines don't offer much protection from Omi Pfizer has said it will take them 100 days to start shipping the new vaccine, early samples of Omi were sent to Pfizer already. I have a feeling the second infection for tRUmptards will be more deadly, there's always a silver lining.
 

Snoopy808

Well-Known Member
mRNA is a game changer. Your last sentences do not apply.
Really? The jabs are working? Where's the herd immunity? Its not possible if jabbed people or naturally infected can still acquire the virus and transmit it. This isn't the type of virus to be controlled with herd immunity.
While mRNA is the new slick, sexy, scientifically modern shot, its not a game changer as we are seeing. Not for coronaviruses, maybe a different family of as yet unencountered virus or illness. The pharmaceutical companies would rather use DNA based jabs that are more shelf stable and potentially to be just as effective as the mRNA ones. Which are in pre clinical trials as we speak. And just wait for the antivaxxers to get stirred up with those.
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member
Really? The jabs are working? Where's the herd immunity? Its not possible if jabbed people or naturally infected can still acquire the virus and transmit it. This isn't the type of virus to be controlled with herd immunity.
While mRNA is the new slick, sexy, scientifically modern shot, its not a game changer as we are seeing. Not for coronaviruses, maybe a different family of as yet unencountered virus or illness. The pharmaceutical companies would rather use DNA based jabs that are more shelf stable and potentially to be just as effective as the mRNA ones. Which are in pre clinical trials as we speak. And just wait for the antivaxxers to get stirred up with those.
You are comprehensively incorrect.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Snoopy and PJ do both have a point. I thought maybe Omie might infect us all and we would go back to normal. Would that not be nice? But I also realize that is a long shot and might have to involve divine intervention. As far as herd immunity, unless you get the whole world done at the same time it will not happen. This is including animals. Or you could do it country by country without any travel between them and hopefully have everything fall into place.

No, the shot was meant to reduce the bulge of sick people at one time so the medical systems could cope. Here we have 80% of sick people in hospital are unvaxinated. What would it be like if those idiots would have rolled up their sleeves? We won't know if the experiment would have worked because of these fools. They fucked us.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Really? The jabs are working? Where's the herd immunity? Its not possible if jabbed people or naturally infected can still acquire the virus and transmit it. This isn't the type of virus to be controlled with herd immunity.
While mRNA is the new slick, sexy, scientifically modern shot, its not a game changer as we are seeing. Not for coronaviruses, maybe a different family of as yet unencountered virus or illness. The pharmaceutical companies would rather use DNA based jabs that are more shelf stable and potentially to be just as effective as the mRNA ones. Which are in pre clinical trials as we speak. And just wait for the antivaxxers to get stirred up with those.
Do your own research.

 
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