Hunt for Red October. The Russian describes this whole life he wants when he gets to America, which is to live in Montana.
He gets shot/killed and his last words were "I would like to have seen Montana"
Hunt for Red October. The Russian describes this whole life he wants when he gets to America, which is to live in Montana.
He gets shot/killed and his last words were "I would like to have seen Montana"
Depends what component of the virus that the immune system uses for recognition, and if the variant has the same or similar protein.
For these, they apparently use the spike protein as the immune signature, so gor the variants to slip by then the spike protein would have to be sufficient different which I highly doubt.
That is a different issue altogether. This is specifically addressing their argument that the vaccine doesn't work against variants. This is an astounding claim that would require hard evidence, which they can't/won't produce.
There need to be variants/mutations that are substantially different, enough to make the structure unrecognized by the immune cells.
I'm not dodging the question since I'm not the one making the assertion. When confronted by someone making the surface argument that the vaccines aren't effective against "variants", you can either address the issue as I suggested and let them figure it out themselves, or jump straight into the "viruses don't exist" strategy and they will just dismiss you out of hand.