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CNN invited on Dr. Salim Abdool Karim, a South African doctor, to discuss the latest medical information on the Omicron variant, which is being used to justify increasingly extreme government mandates and lockdowns in numerous once-free nations.

Omicron’s impact on patients thus far has been “mostly mild,” but there may be “severe” cases later, the doctor said.

CNN host Brianna Keilar began by asking the doctor about Omicron’s transmissibility. In a sign that the “experts” have already given up on the “vaccines” stopping variants like Delta and Omicron, she gives a tacit admission that they are not “effective” against these mutations.

“Is this more transmissible and are you seeing it evade vaccines?” Keilar asked.

“Yes,” Dr. Karim replied. “When we look at the virus itself, it has several mutations that should confer on it the ability to transmit faster, but of course we need to know whether it’s doing so. So now, when we look at the epidemiological data, we’ve compared the three previous waves and the rate at which they increase in the first seven days after the wave threshold. And what we have found is that the Omicron variant is doubling faster than any of the three previous waves.”

The developing problems with this for the lockdown and vaccine passport extremists are manifold: First, higher transmissibility, provided “mild” symptoms, means that there is likely to be a rapid increase of prior infections with Covid. This has the potential to exponentially increase Natural Immunity, which is being demonstrated in states that have experienced the third wave from the Delta variant (southern states like Florida, e.g.).

Secondly, the vaccines are again admittedly not stopping the spread (CNN refers to this as ‘evasion,’ but it may be more appropriate to call them ‘vectors’ for the variants). This means that vaccine “mandates” and “passports” are moot. And if the symptoms continue to be less severe, then the argument about reducing hospitalizations (people may remember “15 Days to Slow the Spread”), then the public health rationalizations for extreme Covid response policies evaporate.

CNN invited on Dr. Salim Abdool Karim, a South African doctor, to discuss the latest medical information on the Omicron variant, which is being used to justify increasingly extreme government mandates and lockdowns in numerous once-free nations. Omicron’s impact on patients thus far has been “mostly mild,” but there may be “severe” cases later, the doctor said. CNN host Brianna Keilar began by asking the doctor about Omicron’s transmissibility. In a sign that the “experts” have already given up on the “vaccines” stopping variants like Delta and Omicron, she gives a tacit admission that they are not “effective” against these mutations. “Is this more transmissible and are you seeing it evade vaccines?” Keilar asked. “Yes,” Dr. Karim replied. “When we look at the virus itself, it has several mutations that should confer on it the ability to transmit faster, but of course we need to know whether it’s doing so. So now, when we look at the epidemiological data, we’ve compared the three previous waves and the rate at which they increase in the first seven days after the wave threshold. And what we have found is that the Omicron variant is doubling faster than any of the three previous waves.” The developing problems with this for the lockdown and vaccine passport extremists are manifold: First, higher transmissibility, provided “mild” symptoms, means that there is likely to be a rapid increase of prior infections with Covid. This has the potential to exponentially increase Natural Immunity, which is being demonstrated in states that have experienced the third wave from the Delta variant (southern states like Florida, e.g.). Secondly, the vaccines are again admittedly not stopping the spread (CNN refers to this as ‘evasion,’ but it may be more appropriate to call them ‘vectors’ for the variants). This means that vaccine “mandates” and “passports” are moot. And if the symptoms continue to be less severe, then the argument about reducing hospitalizations (people may remember “15 Days to Slow the Spread”), then the public health rationalizations for extreme Covid response policies evaporate.

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