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June 2, 2021
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The latest study suggests that if you had even a mild case of COVID-19, your antibody levels may fall over time, but memory B cells will patrol your bloodstream for reinfection and plasma cells in your bone marrow will keep making antibodies for decades.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-01442-9

This would make sense, since most vaccines work by making your body think you had a particular disease, to try to mimic the immunity you get from really having it. But it brings up an important point: with so many people trying to divide Americans into two groups (vaccinated and unvaccinated), and prevent the unvaccinated from going without masks or getting on planes or even being able to afford to attend a concert, what about people who had COVID and are now naturally immune, maybe even more so than the vaccinated? Some doctors are advising them not to get the vaccine, out of concerns that it could cause complications. Should there be a third category: “Unvaccinated but immune because I had it already”?

Or maybe we should just stop putting people in categories and denying them rights, keep allowing those who haven’t had COVID to get vaccinated if they want to until we reach herd immunity (if we haven’t already), and quit trying to force people to get the shot if they don’t want to. Because forcing them to take a shot is a practice that’s about to enter the court system, and there’s a good chance it won’t survive.

https://www.westernjournal.com/100-health-care-professionals-staff-sue-hospital-vaccine-mandate-warns-employees-not-human-guinea-pigs/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=huckabee

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Comments 11-14 of 14

  • Kay Emrick

    06/07/2021 07:55 AM

    Thank you for addressing what I feel like is a much ignored subject, those of us who had the virus and feel like we have the best immunity.

  • Christine Battaglio

    06/07/2021 07:21 AM

    I had a very bad (but not treated medically) case of Covid at the age of 73 in March of 2020 when Covid was rampant in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, before the masks and lockdowns. I survived, as did my aging brother. We do not want the vaccine and don’t think we need it.
    By the way, I thought the mask mandate was lifted in our state but my trip to a grocery store without a mask upset the older checkout clerk who told me the CDC had given individual stores the right to require a mask. He also told me lifting mask restrictions would lead to a spike in a few weeks—the whole party line. I put my mask on and didn’t argue. But I absolutely refuse to get the vaccine.

  • Mike Ungerman

    06/07/2021 07:15 AM

    I am commenting on your 'Good News for Recovered Covid Patients' story. A very good friend of mine had Covid-19 in February 2020. It took him 6 weeks to 'gut it out' and get rid of all the symptoms and finally receive a negative test. Then in March of this year (2021) he thought he had a sinus infection, but as it got worse, he got tested and it was Covid-19; likely one of the new Brazilian variants here in Florida. I am a proponent of taking Ivermectin using the FLCCC's protocols (https://www.flccc.net), so I urged him to get a prescription for Ivermectin. By the time he received his medication, he was about 5 days into the disease, and getting worse. Within hours of taking his first dose, he actually was feeling better and by the 3rd day of daily doses, his symptoms were almost gone. By the end of the 5th day he had no symptoms at all and went to be tested; the results came in negative. So my point is, prior survivors can still be infected; likely from new variants. and IVERMECTIN WORKS!

  • Julie Coffey

    06/07/2021 12:10 AM

    Both my husband and I had Covid in Jan of 2020. My Dr. said NOT to get the vaccine. So now I am one of the b@stard red headed step children of society. Where does 'science' fake or real, land on this? I'm so sick and tired of it all.