Deleted member 2897
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It's not really a contradiction. They simply aren't going to make conclusive statements or give guidelines until there is far more data available to evaluate.
Well, we know enough to know that the CDC is a bunch of ****ing *** hats. Why do I say that? The data.
We have actual full complete studies, which the CDC has released, which show zero spread of covid from vaccinated people. Now will that always stay 0.000% as more people get vaccinated? I would doubt it. But we know its not going to end up at 50% of vaccinated people spread it, it won't end up at 5%, and it will probably be well under 0.1%. (Because we have tens and tens of millions of fully vaccinated people already, so its a large data set on top of the clinical trials.) So it may end up 0.0001% or 0.01%, but any of those possible outcomes are an immaterial difference.
In terms of getting covid, we're up to about 75 people who have died of covid after having been vaccinated. These are all extremely frail people immune systemwise from the articles I've read.
And then you cross these two groups together, and the risk of vaccinated people crossing paths and harming each other is somewhere way out in Planck's Constant land.
The CDC is worrying about keeping numbers as close to zero as possible, which is a ridiculous perspective, given they don't treat anything else like that.
Get vaccinated. Once you've been vaccinated, if you're still worried, then wear a mask, keep your distance from other people, and practice good hygiene. If you're younger, healthy, or either way not worried, then don't wear a mask, hang out with friends and family, go to church, travel, whatever you want. You'll be fine. Your risk of getting seriously ill is no different at this point than from catching the flu or getting hit by a car or being shot or choking on your food.