To: carranza2 who wrote (173852 ) 6/28/2021 7:26:56 PM From: TobagoJack Respond to of 218871 In the meantime 'they' are doubling down, given that a particular vaccine is not doing as expected, and neither is the other, so 'they' are recommending that one can double-up on the unknowable unknowns and further experiment in enlarged human trials to see what if anything would happen Given that 'they' are doing so, am suspecting, but remain agnostic, albeit fearful, that mathematically speaking, 'they' are in the dark, and are not telling us all that we need to know, creating the start of a bigger mess akin to using a shovel to clean up a coffee spill on the expensive rug Two questions appropriate for 'them' to answer (1) If the disease is not so dire, what justifies the lock-downs and the hurried experimentations? (2) If the disease is dire enough, why not lockdown and tee-up martial law-enforced social distancing and get the job done? (3) Given that we are nearly 2-years into the CoVid issue, surely we as a planet have enough of a hint as to what works and what does not, w/r to vaccines, social distance, economic lockdown, etc etc etc and risk levels. What are the science guidelines, by the mathematics?bloomberg.com Dose Mixing Shows Strong Response; U.K. Cases Jump: Virus Update 29 June 2021, 05:59 GMT+8 Mixing doses of Covid-19 vaccines from Pfizer Inc. and AstraZeneca Plc creates a strong immune response, according to results from a University of Oxford study, a finding that could enable greater flexibility in the use of scarce supplies. Hong Kong banned flights from the U.K. amid rising infections. Hours later, Britain reported the most new cases since January that were fueled by the delta variant first identified in India. Even so, an end to restrictions in England is “ very likely ” to go ahead on July 19, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson said. Meanwhile, Singapore is grappling with how to reopen even as rival financial center Hong Kong presses forward with easing travel and other restrictions for vaccinated residents -- despite its overall lower rate of inoculation.