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[–] 2 pts (edited )

E1: The below is extrapolated from Our World in Data for the dataset of the entire US:

Not really. As of today: they claim that 78.3% of the population has received their first dose. They claim that 66.7% of the population is fully vaccinated. They claim that 30.6% of the population has received a booster.

April 5 (1 month ago for simplicity), 77.9% of the population had at least one dose. Subtract from that the population that is fully vaccinated today, 66.7%, you find that 11.2% of the population is eligible for the second shot but hasn't taken it.

December 5 (5 months ago for simplicity), 61.7% of the population was fully vaccinated. Subtract from that the 30.6% of the population that has its booster today, you find that 31.1% of the population is eligible for their booster but hasn't taken it.

Consider also the people who had their booster on December 5 (16%) who then got a second booster, for every person who has had 2 boosters there is 1 person who hasn't had any but could have, and the easily accessible data (our world in data) isn't showing that.

And so, 21.7% has never had the shot according to their data, 11.2% has had the first shot but not the second even though they could, and 31.1% of the population is eligible for a booster but hasn't taken it, and some number between 0 and 16% is being concealed by double boosted individuals.

21.7+11.2+31.1= 64% plus the fuzzy 1 or 2% of people who got a second booster who are hiding the people who didn't (best I could find was a consumer reports reference to 4.3 million having the 2nd booster by 4/19)

That's up to 66% noncompliance