(09-16-2021, 07:20 PM)KoryKANE Wrote: (09-16-2021, 06:44 PM)Satan Wrote: (09-16-2021, 01:11 PM)KoryKANE Wrote: As expected they are trying to harrass/bully everyone into taking the experimental gene mod, even those like me who already had it and got healthy again.
I don't want to risk the myriad of side effects as a young and healthy individual, so my only way to regain a social life is by being reinfected and tested positive.
How do I find such a person and how do I successfully get a positive test?
Thank you.
"gene mod".
Not how this vaccine works lol.
"myriad of side effects".
Ah yes, the side effects that are less hassle than the flu.
The answer to your question is that it depends. Do you live in an area full of ignorant unvaccinated people who love to get all touchy feely with each other in a gas station? If so, then basically just go to any area with a large number of people congregated such as a shopping mall.
If you do go this incredibly risky route, do the world a favour and quarantine at the very least.
Look, man, I don't wanna get into this argument. That's kinda my point though: everyone should be able to decide and those who decide not to, should not get punished by state or corporation for believing bodily autonomy is not a luxury but human right.
Anyway: I guess I would need a positive test to be able to determine who is positive and infectious, otherwise I'd be catcher hepatitis and not rona lmao. Of course I would quarantine if I was tested, but it's a conundrum situation because natural immunity is far superior in effectiveness so I wouldn't be able to catch it in the first place...
If you've already had it, didn't you have a test done before?
& If as you state natural immunity was superior than vaccination, wouldn't you already having it mean it would be difficult to get again?
Short of breaking into a covid wing and french kissing the patients, the only surefire way that science has shown us so far for catching it would be exposure from another, most easily occurs when social distancing isn't followed, or having bad luck in general.
If you're dead set on doing it, then you'd have to be around others who potentially may have it, and not follow the guidelines set by the CDC. The main problem you may have though is that to do so with the least possible impact to others, you'd want to do a potential exposure event, then self isolate until you've tested after every interaction, and if you have a string of not getting infected after potential exposure, that can add a bunch of time and cost to this whole thing, assuming you don't have free testing.
Previous exposure or not, it is still known to be possible to be reinfected, especially as has been shown with the delta variant, so previously having it doesn't necessarily prevent you from getting it again.