Sure, I'm aware of that, but I think that because so many people were not susceptible to severe disease, it was unnecessary (a) to lock everyone down and (b) to vaccinate everyone.
Lock down there are arguments for and against - I think, on balance, some degree of lockdown was necessary to protect the health service capacity, but the most recent was probably not required. Vaccinations I think were a no-brainer - I'd like to live in a world that wasn't filled with anti-scientific pontificating nonsense where you'd be able to presume that the overwhelming majority of people would take up the offer, but unfortunately that's not the world we live in. The balance of risk between being vaccinated and not doesn't even justify a discussion about why we shouldn't.
Even within those valid argument areas, though, this argument is just ridiculous.
That was my position from the start. I was just pointing to the data because policies seem to have been based on a mistrust of natural immunity from the get-go.
It's not a mistrust, it's that consequences of waiting for natural immunity to build, both for vulnerable individuals and for the national infrastructure, were horrendous.
For example, the requirement to have been double-jabbed to avoid quarantine, even if one had antibodies from previous infection.
That's a pragmatic choice based on how easy it is to mass deploy reliable antibody testing; given that there's virtually no risk to having the vaccination, I don't have a problem with it being run how it was. This has already been costly enough, running a separate testing programme alongside lateral flow and PCR and the vaccination programme doesn't seem justified to pacify people taken in by palpably nonsensical disinformation campaigns.
(Edit: ad-o's point was probably right, although other factors are at play in the US, such as the inability of many to afford to pay for treatment to control underlying illness, leading to their increased risk of severe covid)
I was working on a conversation about the UK. Trying to make any kind of rational point about the US healthcare 'system' is just a non-starter!
O.