Wuhan Coronavirus: Megathread - Got too big

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I know someone who wears this as essentially a "fuck you" to masks. They have to wear one to work so they opt for the least effective, more obnoxious option. :story:

I've noticed that the backlash against the "shut it all DOWN!" screechers is growing, especially online. Where before it was mostly a chorus of angry voices demanding we all stay shuttered for two more years, now there's people really feeling the effects of the constant insane fluctuating lockdowns, and they're snapping back. You know, people who own businesses, who have children, social lives....things actually being actively affected every day by the madness of this all.

I'm not quite sure when the boiling point will be, but I predict in the next three months shit's gonna go down.

I just wear a skull bandana. Not only does it do nothing but I get to go through this pandemic cosplaying motherfucking #TYCED
 
This just happened and I do mean just happened to me at work.

Im a proud non-user of ze mask for obvious reasons, I barely used masks in my own business ever since this garbage started.

And let me tell you, the last few months were very telling at what type of people my clients are.

Most people were neutral normies, they didnt really react positively or negatively about me not wearing a mask. And you see, for this being my business, whenever I attend people behind the cashier. I always make sure to attend them with legit care and smiles (both because I legit love my job and because I want them to come back and eat moar pizzas). We all place as much attention on our attendance as much as we put on quality assurance of our pizzas.

Then we have the chads. People that either dont wear masks because fuck them or they wear them until they see me and realize Im one of them, then its off. They are the clients I can properly talk with about this whole mess without concerning of them freaking out on me. I love these people and they make sure I know they have our brand's back.

Then, of course, we have the soyboys, the karens and the soysual suspects.

Aka, the bunch that will screech on me for daring not to wear a mask. They ask "where is your mask?". Now consider this, Im a guy that has to attend line phones to get orders from my clients...try using those with a fucking mask on, it will affect your voice and your breathing wont like it. There was a client that, I shit you not, recalled I told him months ago that I already had the virus and thus had (anti-bodies for it) and then tonight he came back (armed with those heavy virgin approved masks) and said "You know, research said that you can get the corona virus again after 3 months...". I legit asked the prick what he aws talking about and he reminded that I told him months I go I didnt need the mask because I had already got it.

The fucking nerve of this asshole arriving with his cuck of a son (that was quiet just staring at the menu), I receive them with a warm welcome and smile and he basically tells me that I might be dangerous again and that I must put the mask back on. I admit I got bit internally pissed and told him that research said that asymptomatics cant trasmit the disease and Im fine. The guy got quiet...as if he had no answer to me, he seemed to not expect I reply back with actual science and not stuff he read on his twitter feed.

But then I remembered that I was running a business and the last thing I need are the gestapo paying my business a visit to fine or close us up for daring to not follow the doctrine. So I "fake apologozied" to him, saying he was "right" (probably feeding into his fragile ego) and that I was going to get my mask. And he then told me it was fine and whatever...tho Im concerned if he wont try to go beyond because I not only dared to not obey but to talk back to him.

*sigh* I doubt these people want this shit to end, think about it, they have waiting for this moment their entire lives. Before they were the jokes of society, now they are the "brave heroes" of it. They get to tell people who are treating them well how "dangerous" they are and still remain in the moral highground.

Fuck...
 
This just happened and I do mean just happened to me at work.

Im a proud non-user of ze mask for obvious reasons, I barely used masks in my own business ever since this garbage started.

And let me tell you, the last few months were very telling at what type of people my clients are.

Most people were neutral normies, they didnt really react positively or negatively about me not wearing a mask. And you see, for this being my business, whenever I attend people behind the cashier. I always make sure to attend them with legit care and smiles (both because I legit love my job and because I want them to come back and eat moar pizzas). We all place as much attention on our attendance as much as we put on quality assurance of our pizzas.

Then we have the chads. People that either dont wear masks because fuck them or they wear them until they see me and realize Im one of them, then its off. They are the clients I can properly talk with about this whole mess without concerning of them freaking out on me. I love these people and they make sure I know they have our brand's back.

Then, of course, we have the soyboys, the karens and the soysual suspects.

Aka, the bunch that will screech on me for daring not to wear a mask. They ask "where is your mask?". Now consider this, Im a guy that has to attend line phones to get orders from my clients...try using those with a fucking mask on, it will affect your voice and your breathing wont like it. There was a client that, I shit you not, recalled I told him months ago that I already had the virus and thus had (anti-bodies for it) and then tonight he came back (armed with those heavy virgin approved masks) and said "You know, research said that you can get the corona virus again after 3 months...". I legit asked the prick what he aws talking about and he reminded that I told him months I go I didnt need the mask because I had already got it.

The fucking nerve of this asshole arriving with his cuck of a son (that was quiet just staring at the menu), I receive them with a warm welcome and smile and he basically tells me that I might be dangerous again and that I must put the mask back on. I admit I got bit internally pissed and told him that research said that asymptomatics cant trasmit the disease and Im fine. The guy got quiet...as if he had no answer to me, he seemed to not expect I reply back with actual science and not stuff he read on his twitter feed.

But then I remembered that I was running a business and the last thing I need are the gestapo paying my business a visit to fine or close us up for daring to not follow the doctrine. So I "fake apologozied" to him, saying he was "right" (probably feeding into his fragile ego) and that I was going to get my mask. And he then told me it was fine and whatever...tho Im concerned if he wont try to go beyond because I not only dared to not obey but to talk back to him.

*sigh* I doubt these people want this shit to end, think about it, they have waiting for this moment their entire lives. Before they were the jokes of society, now they are the "brave heroes" of it. They get to tell people who are treating them well how "dangerous" they are and still remain in the moral highground.

Fuck...

Out of all the people I know in my extended friend group by far the people most excited about forever lockdowns and mask mandates are the ones who work in HR.

Infer from that what you will.
 
  • If people actually listed for like a month and followed some simple rules perhaps some shit could open up. But you can't set shit on fire and then get mad that you can't go back into a burning building.
  • Actually still waiting to start that 2 week quarantine thing.
  • If all these "patriots" and antimaskers hadn't spent 9 months telling us that science doesn't work...we would have been done with this 7 months ago. But noooooo, they are proving themselves wrong each and every day. Who do they blame it on? They blame it on "sheep" and "tyrant governors"...which is still proven to be stupid.
  • no it’s just the truth. America did not adhere to an effective quarantine


To be fair, I think "more people" have started to realize this is bullshit, but it still amazes me that some people genuinely believe this crap. They unironically wanted the government to go the China route of welding people in their homes. The police didn't arrest people for going outside, therefore there was no quarantine.

Also, apparently the quarantines worked so well in Europe that they have to keep doing them over and over again, but this is just a conspiracy theory. Trump fucked up Europe too somehow
"White people are too selfish and individualistic, Europe does the same shit we do, we're just louder about it"-These people, probably.
 
Out of all the people I know in my extended friend group by far the people most excited about forever lockdowns and mask mandates are the ones who work in HR.

Infer from that what you will.

Aka the "essential" and the "home office" gang, getting the same paychecks for 1/3 of the work.

That includes the politicians.

Well, gesh...it really makes you think
 
Covid-19 vaccine: First person receives Pfizer jab in UK - BBC News

First person to get a vaccine in the UK.

A UK grandmother has become the first person in the world to be given the Pfizer Covid-19 jab as part of a mass vaccination programme.
Margaret Keenan, who turns 91 next week, said the injection she received at 06:31 GMT was the "best early birthday present".
It was the first of 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine that will be dispensed in the coming weeks.
Up to four million more are expected by the end of the month.
Hubs in the UK are starting the rollout by vaccinating the over-80s and some health and care staff.
Senior NHS sources told the BBC "thousands of vaccinations" had taken place across the UK on Tuesday.
Dubbing the day "V-day", Health Secretary Matt Hancock said it was "a tribute to scientific endeavour and human ingenuity and to the hard work of so many people.
"Today marks the start of the fightback against our common enemy, the coronavirus," he said.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, on a visit to a London hospital to see some of the first people getting the jab, said getting vaccinated was "good for you and good for the whole country".
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "Today we should all allow ourselves a smile - but we must not drop our guard."
On Tuesday, the UK government reported a further 616 people had died within 28 days of a positive test, taking the total, by that measure, to 62,033. A further 12,282 people tested positive for the virus.

Second in line for the jab at University Hospital in Coventry was 81-year-old William Shakespeare from Warwickshire.
At University Hospital, Coventry, matron May Parsons administered the very first injection to Ms Keenan.
"I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against Covid-19," said Ms Keenan, who is originally from Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh.
"It's the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the new year, after being on my own for most of the year.
"My advice to anyone offered the vaccine is to take it. If I can have it at 90, then you can have it too," she added.
Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, who witnessed the "historic moment", said: "We couldn't hug her but we could clap, and everybody did so in the room."
IMAGE
nAn emotional Sister Joanna Sloan said she had been looking forward to the vaccine for so long
Throughout the day, patients and health workers at some 50 hospitals around the UK have been getting the jab:
The UK is the first country in the world to start using the Pfizer vaccine after regulators approved its use last week.
On Tuesday, US regulators confirmed the vaccine is 95% effective, paving the way for it to be approved for emergency use.
The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine has also been found to be "safe and effective", according to a paper published on Tuesday and assessed by independent scientists.

Matt Hancock says he is thrilled but warns that people must still stick to the rules
Speaking in the Commons, the health secretary stressed people did not need to apply for the vaccine. He said the NHS would be in touch with those eligible and urged them to "please step forward for your country".
Mr Hancock went on to warn that there was "still a long march ahead", saying there were "worrying signs" of the virus growing in Essex, London and Kent.
New data released by national statisticians for the week ending 27 November showed that of the 14,106 deaths registered in the UK, nearly 3,400 involved Covid. This is 20% higher than the five-year average but similar to the percentages seen in the past two weeks.
NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens called the first vaccinations "remarkable achievement", but cautioned it was a "first step" and "incredibly important" people continued to act sensibly.

media captionBoris Johnson: 'It will gradually make a huge, huge difference... but we haven't defeated this virus yet"
On a visit to London's Guy's Hospital, the prime minister spoke to 81-year-old Lyn Wheeler, who was the first to receive the vaccine there.
"It is really very moving to hear her say she is doing it for Britain, which is exactly right - she is protecting herself, but also helping to protect the entire country," Mr Johnson said.
Earlier, he thanked the NHS, volunteers and "all of the scientists who worked so hard to develop this vaccine".
Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth said it was "absolutely fabulous" to see people getting the vaccine and thanked everyone involved in making it happen.
How the Pfizer vaccine requires two doses

Some 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine have been secured by the government to be administered in the coming weeks - although vaccination is not compulsory.
Orders have been placed for 40 million in total - enough for 20 million people, as two courses are needed. However, most supplies are not expected to become available until next year.
Mr Hancock said he expected it to take "several weeks" to get the first group of health workers, care staff and over-80s vaccinated.
2px presentational grey line

'A momentous day but huge task ahead'​

This is a momentous day, but make no mistake the NHS faces a huge task in rolling out this vaccine.
First, there needs to be a smooth supply - and already there are reports of manufacturing problems, which means the UK is expecting less than half of the 10 million doses of the Pfizer jab it was planning for by the end of the year.
The fact it needs to be kept in ultra-cold storage and in batches of 975 units is an added complication that has meant it cannot yet be taken into care homes to vaccinate residents - the very highest priority group - or sent out to GPs to run vaccination clinics in the community.
NHS bosses hope to receive guidance from the regulator next week on how to get around this.
But these factors illustrate why the UK is still pinning its hopes on a second vaccine developed by Oxford University.
That one can be kept in fridges and so is easier to distribute, is British-made and - what is more - there is an ever-growing stockpile ready to use.
If that vaccine gets the green light from regulators, there will be a genuine hope the first few months of 2021 will see rapid progress in offering jabs to the most vulnerable people, so the UK can return to something closer to normality.

Welp, RIP already to the granny.
 

Businesses can ‘likely’ mandate coronavirus vaccine for employees, attorney says​

Willey said the COVID-19 vaccine is being distributed by the federal government, and that businesses cannot buy a supply that could be used to vaccinate their employees.

“You as local businesses or employers really don’t have control over when you can get it in your hands or when your employees can receive it,” she said, in response to a question as to whether businesses could purchase their own supply of the vaccine for employee use. “The answer is absolutely not.”
Not so fast.
 
Same ol', same ol' shit from the county I live in. This county "health director" needs to be fucked in the ass by a stallion.

BREAKING NEWS FROM THE CARMEL PINE CONE

December 8, 2020, 3:24 p.m.


ICU NUMBERS MOVE IN WRONG DIRECTION; MORENO CALLS SITUATION 'CRITICAL'

• Says preemptive shutdown order here still under consideration

The availability of ICU beds in the Greater Bay Area, including Monterey County, shrank to 24.5 percent today, down from yesterday's 25.7 percent, according to the latest numbers from the California Department of Public Health. In Monterey County itself, 20.5 percent of ICU beds are available, the CDPH said.

The shrinkage brings the region closer to — but still somewhat distant from — Gov. Gavin Newsom's 15.0 threshold for a new stay-home order to take effect, as it already has in Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley. According to Newsom, reaching the threshold in this part of the state is probably several weeks away.

But speaking to the Monterey County Board of Supervisors this afternoon, health officer Dr. Ed Moreno added impetus to his comments last Friday that he might impose a new shutdown here without waiting for a particular benchmark to be reached.

The ICU situation in this county is “critical,” Moreno told the supervisors, adding that he and health officials in other jurisdictions in the region would have to make a decision soon on whether to issue a stay-home order of their own. He did not say when "soon" would be here.

Because of the new focus on ICU availability as the benchmark for economic shutdowns, CHOMP announced this morning it would begin offering daily updates about its intensive care unit. Currently, the hospital said 18 of its 20 ICU beds are full, including six patients with Covid-19. That's a worrisome situation to say the least, but if the remaining beds become occupied, "we have plans in place to treat ICU-level patients in other areas of the hospital," CHOMP spokesperson Monica Sciuto said.

As for the status of the epidemic itself, the county health department said this morning it had confirmed 238 new coronavirus infections among Monterey County residents. Of those, 153 were in Salinas and the Salinas Valley, while 39 were in the Monterey Peninsula. (Please see the Cases and Rates by Zip Code table, below, for specific numbers for your community.) Today's 238 cases raised the county's 7-day average of new cases per day per 100,000 residents to 49.8, which is a record. The county's four hospitals have a total of 107 inpatients, including ICU patients, who have tested positive for coronavirus, the health department added.

To see the most up-to-date charts and tables from the county health department, click here. Below, you can also find the updated versions of our charts showing coronavirus infections countywide and in the Monterey Peninsula, along with the data for hospitalizations and our chart breaking down Monterey County's coronavirus cases and infection rates by zip code. Please check these charts and tables for the latest data on coronavirus cases in your community.


May Moreno be visited in his dreams by all those who have lost their livelihoods, careers, homes, etc. He appears to be the quintessential bureaucrat who doesn't give a fuck about anything but collecting his bloated salary. We'll be living with the societal damage of all this for many years.
 
Covid-19 vaccine: First person receives Pfizer jab in UK - BBC News

First person to get a vaccine in the UK.

A UK grandmother has become the first person in the world to be given the Pfizer Covid-19 jab as part of a mass vaccination programme.
Margaret Keenan, who turns 91 next week, said the injection she received at 06:31 GMT was the "best early birthday present".
It was the first of 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine that will be dispensed in the coming weeks.
Up to four million more are expected by the end of the month.
Hubs in the UK are starting the rollout by vaccinating the over-80s and some health and care staff.
Senior NHS sources told the BBC "thousands of vaccinations" had taken place across the UK on Tuesday.
Dubbing the day "V-day", Health Secretary Matt Hancock said it was "a tribute to scientific endeavour and human ingenuity and to the hard work of so many people.
"Today marks the start of the fightback against our common enemy, the coronavirus," he said.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, on a visit to a London hospital to see some of the first people getting the jab, said getting vaccinated was "good for you and good for the whole country".
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "Today we should all allow ourselves a smile - but we must not drop our guard."
On Tuesday, the UK government reported a further 616 people had died within 28 days of a positive test, taking the total, by that measure, to 62,033. A further 12,282 people tested positive for the virus.

Second in line for the jab at University Hospital in Coventry was 81-year-old William Shakespeare from Warwickshire.
At University Hospital, Coventry, matron May Parsons administered the very first injection to Ms Keenan.
"I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against Covid-19," said Ms Keenan, who is originally from Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh.
"It's the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the new year, after being on my own for most of the year.
"My advice to anyone offered the vaccine is to take it. If I can have it at 90, then you can have it too," she added.
Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, who witnessed the "historic moment", said: "We couldn't hug her but we could clap, and everybody did so in the room."
IMAGE
nAn emotional Sister Joanna Sloan said she had been looking forward to the vaccine for so long
Throughout the day, patients and health workers at some 50 hospitals around the UK have been getting the jab:
The UK is the first country in the world to start using the Pfizer vaccine after regulators approved its use last week.
On Tuesday, US regulators confirmed the vaccine is 95% effective, paving the way for it to be approved for emergency use.
The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine has also been found to be "safe and effective", according to a paper published on Tuesday and assessed by independent scientists.

Matt Hancock says he is thrilled but warns that people must still stick to the rules
Speaking in the Commons, the health secretary stressed people did not need to apply for the vaccine. He said the NHS would be in touch with those eligible and urged them to "please step forward for your country".
Mr Hancock went on to warn that there was "still a long march ahead", saying there were "worrying signs" of the virus growing in Essex, London and Kent.
New data released by national statisticians for the week ending 27 November showed that of the 14,106 deaths registered in the UK, nearly 3,400 involved Covid. This is 20% higher than the five-year average but similar to the percentages seen in the past two weeks.
NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens called the first vaccinations "remarkable achievement", but cautioned it was a "first step" and "incredibly important" people continued to act sensibly.

media captionBoris Johnson: 'It will gradually make a huge, huge difference... but we haven't defeated this virus yet"
On a visit to London's Guy's Hospital, the prime minister spoke to 81-year-old Lyn Wheeler, who was the first to receive the vaccine there.
"It is really very moving to hear her say she is doing it for Britain, which is exactly right - she is protecting herself, but also helping to protect the entire country," Mr Johnson said.
Earlier, he thanked the NHS, volunteers and "all of the scientists who worked so hard to develop this vaccine".
Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth said it was "absolutely fabulous" to see people getting the vaccine and thanked everyone involved in making it happen.
How the Pfizer vaccine requires two doses

Some 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine have been secured by the government to be administered in the coming weeks - although vaccination is not compulsory.
Orders have been placed for 40 million in total - enough for 20 million people, as two courses are needed. However, most supplies are not expected to become available until next year.
Mr Hancock said he expected it to take "several weeks" to get the first group of health workers, care staff and over-80s vaccinated.
2px presentational grey line

'A momentous day but huge task ahead'​

This is a momentous day, but make no mistake the NHS faces a huge task in rolling out this vaccine.
First, there needs to be a smooth supply - and already there are reports of manufacturing problems, which means the UK is expecting less than half of the 10 million doses of the Pfizer jab it was planning for by the end of the year.
The fact it needs to be kept in ultra-cold storage and in batches of 975 units is an added complication that has meant it cannot yet be taken into care homes to vaccinate residents - the very highest priority group - or sent out to GPs to run vaccination clinics in the community.
NHS bosses hope to receive guidance from the regulator next week on how to get around this.
But these factors illustrate why the UK is still pinning its hopes on a second vaccine developed by Oxford University.
That one can be kept in fridges and so is easier to distribute, is British-made and - what is more - there is an ever-growing stockpile ready to use.
If that vaccine gets the green light from regulators, there will be a genuine hope the first few months of 2021 will see rapid progress in offering jabs to the most vulnerable people, so the UK can return to something closer to normality.

Welp, RIP already to the granny.

I cant wait for the negative side effects to begin to appear and the media do its hardest to hide it and say anyone that claims its not 101% safe is a racist bigot.
Oh and good luck suing the companies and government if you happen to get some long term consequences from the jab, they made sure they are completely proofed against any legal methods that could be used against them

They are allowed to poison you and they WILL get away with it
 
Covid-19 vaccine: First person receives Pfizer jab in UK - BBC News

First person to get a vaccine in the UK.

A UK grandmother has become the first person in the world to be given the Pfizer Covid-19 jab as part of a mass vaccination programme.
Margaret Keenan, who turns 91 next week, said the injection she received at 06:31 GMT was the "best early birthday present".
It was the first of 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine that will be dispensed in the coming weeks.
Up to four million more are expected by the end of the month.
Hubs in the UK are starting the rollout by vaccinating the over-80s and some health and care staff.
Senior NHS sources told the BBC "thousands of vaccinations" had taken place across the UK on Tuesday.
Dubbing the day "V-day", Health Secretary Matt Hancock said it was "a tribute to scientific endeavour and human ingenuity and to the hard work of so many people.
"Today marks the start of the fightback against our common enemy, the coronavirus," he said.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, on a visit to a London hospital to see some of the first people getting the jab, said getting vaccinated was "good for you and good for the whole country".
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "Today we should all allow ourselves a smile - but we must not drop our guard."
On Tuesday, the UK government reported a further 616 people had died within 28 days of a positive test, taking the total, by that measure, to 62,033. A further 12,282 people tested positive for the virus.

Second in line for the jab at University Hospital in Coventry was 81-year-old William Shakespeare from Warwickshire.
At University Hospital, Coventry, matron May Parsons administered the very first injection to Ms Keenan.
"I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against Covid-19," said Ms Keenan, who is originally from Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh.
"It's the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the new year, after being on my own for most of the year.
"My advice to anyone offered the vaccine is to take it. If I can have it at 90, then you can have it too," she added.
Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, who witnessed the "historic moment", said: "We couldn't hug her but we could clap, and everybody did so in the room."
IMAGE
nAn emotional Sister Joanna Sloan said she had been looking forward to the vaccine for so long
Throughout the day, patients and health workers at some 50 hospitals around the UK have been getting the jab:
The UK is the first country in the world to start using the Pfizer vaccine after regulators approved its use last week.
On Tuesday, US regulators confirmed the vaccine is 95% effective, paving the way for it to be approved for emergency use.
The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine has also been found to be "safe and effective", according to a paper published on Tuesday and assessed by independent scientists.

Matt Hancock says he is thrilled but warns that people must still stick to the rules
Speaking in the Commons, the health secretary stressed people did not need to apply for the vaccine. He said the NHS would be in touch with those eligible and urged them to "please step forward for your country".
Mr Hancock went on to warn that there was "still a long march ahead", saying there were "worrying signs" of the virus growing in Essex, London and Kent.
New data released by national statisticians for the week ending 27 November showed that of the 14,106 deaths registered in the UK, nearly 3,400 involved Covid. This is 20% higher than the five-year average but similar to the percentages seen in the past two weeks.
NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens called the first vaccinations "remarkable achievement", but cautioned it was a "first step" and "incredibly important" people continued to act sensibly.

media captionBoris Johnson: 'It will gradually make a huge, huge difference... but we haven't defeated this virus yet"
On a visit to London's Guy's Hospital, the prime minister spoke to 81-year-old Lyn Wheeler, who was the first to receive the vaccine there.
"It is really very moving to hear her say she is doing it for Britain, which is exactly right - she is protecting herself, but also helping to protect the entire country," Mr Johnson said.
Earlier, he thanked the NHS, volunteers and "all of the scientists who worked so hard to develop this vaccine".
Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth said it was "absolutely fabulous" to see people getting the vaccine and thanked everyone involved in making it happen.
How the Pfizer vaccine requires two doses

Some 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine have been secured by the government to be administered in the coming weeks - although vaccination is not compulsory.
Orders have been placed for 40 million in total - enough for 20 million people, as two courses are needed. However, most supplies are not expected to become available until next year.
Mr Hancock said he expected it to take "several weeks" to get the first group of health workers, care staff and over-80s vaccinated.
2px presentational grey line

'A momentous day but huge task ahead'​

This is a momentous day, but make no mistake the NHS faces a huge task in rolling out this vaccine.
First, there needs to be a smooth supply - and already there are reports of manufacturing problems, which means the UK is expecting less than half of the 10 million doses of the Pfizer jab it was planning for by the end of the year.
The fact it needs to be kept in ultra-cold storage and in batches of 975 units is an added complication that has meant it cannot yet be taken into care homes to vaccinate residents - the very highest priority group - or sent out to GPs to run vaccination clinics in the community.
NHS bosses hope to receive guidance from the regulator next week on how to get around this.
But these factors illustrate why the UK is still pinning its hopes on a second vaccine developed by Oxford University.
That one can be kept in fridges and so is easier to distribute, is British-made and - what is more - there is an ever-growing stockpile ready to use.
If that vaccine gets the green light from regulators, there will be a genuine hope the first few months of 2021 will see rapid progress in offering jabs to the most vulnerable people, so the UK can return to something closer to normality.

Welp, RIP already to the granny.
I mean, she's 91. She's got like a few years left at most anyway. If anyone actually might have a solid risk/reward profile for this untested shit its the elderly.
I cant wait for the negative side effects to begin to appear and the media do its hardest to hide it and say anyone that claims its not 101% safe is a racist bigot.
Oh and good luck suing the companies and government if you happen to get some long term consequences from the jab, they made sure they are completely proofed against any legal methods that could be used against them

They are allowed to poison you and they WILL get away with it
Nope. There is a lot of shit I'll put up with but I will die on this hill. I will lose my job, I will move somewhere else, I'll get fined or confined to my home, I do not give a fuck. I am not getting that fucking shot. It started out as a genuine concern about safety (which remains), but at this point its turned into a matter of principle. You're not injecting shit into me that I don't want there.
 
Covid-19 vaccine: First person receives Pfizer jab in UK - BBC News

First person to get a vaccine in the UK.

A UK grandmother has become the first person in the world to be given the Pfizer Covid-19 jab as part of a mass vaccination programme.
Margaret Keenan, who turns 91 next week, said the injection she received at 06:31 GMT was the "best early birthday present".
It was the first of 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine that will be dispensed in the coming weeks.
Up to four million more are expected by the end of the month.
Hubs in the UK are starting the rollout by vaccinating the over-80s and some health and care staff.
Senior NHS sources told the BBC "thousands of vaccinations" had taken place across the UK on Tuesday.
Dubbing the day "V-day", Health Secretary Matt Hancock said it was "a tribute to scientific endeavour and human ingenuity and to the hard work of so many people.
"Today marks the start of the fightback against our common enemy, the coronavirus," he said.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson, on a visit to a London hospital to see some of the first people getting the jab, said getting vaccinated was "good for you and good for the whole country".
Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: "Today we should all allow ourselves a smile - but we must not drop our guard."
On Tuesday, the UK government reported a further 616 people had died within 28 days of a positive test, taking the total, by that measure, to 62,033. A further 12,282 people tested positive for the virus.

Second in line for the jab at University Hospital in Coventry was 81-year-old William Shakespeare from Warwickshire.
At University Hospital, Coventry, matron May Parsons administered the very first injection to Ms Keenan.
"I feel so privileged to be the first person vaccinated against Covid-19," said Ms Keenan, who is originally from Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh.
"It's the best early birthday present I could wish for because it means I can finally look forward to spending time with my family and friends in the new year, after being on my own for most of the year.
"My advice to anyone offered the vaccine is to take it. If I can have it at 90, then you can have it too," she added.
Prof Stephen Powis, national medical director of NHS England, who witnessed the "historic moment", said: "We couldn't hug her but we could clap, and everybody did so in the room."
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nAn emotional Sister Joanna Sloan said she had been looking forward to the vaccine for so long
Throughout the day, patients and health workers at some 50 hospitals around the UK have been getting the jab:
The UK is the first country in the world to start using the Pfizer vaccine after regulators approved its use last week.
On Tuesday, US regulators confirmed the vaccine is 95% effective, paving the way for it to be approved for emergency use.
The Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine has also been found to be "safe and effective", according to a paper published on Tuesday and assessed by independent scientists.

Matt Hancock says he is thrilled but warns that people must still stick to the rules
Speaking in the Commons, the health secretary stressed people did not need to apply for the vaccine. He said the NHS would be in touch with those eligible and urged them to "please step forward for your country".
Mr Hancock went on to warn that there was "still a long march ahead", saying there were "worrying signs" of the virus growing in Essex, London and Kent.
New data released by national statisticians for the week ending 27 November showed that of the 14,106 deaths registered in the UK, nearly 3,400 involved Covid. This is 20% higher than the five-year average but similar to the percentages seen in the past two weeks.
NHS England chief executive Sir Simon Stevens called the first vaccinations "remarkable achievement", but cautioned it was a "first step" and "incredibly important" people continued to act sensibly.

media captionBoris Johnson: 'It will gradually make a huge, huge difference... but we haven't defeated this virus yet"
On a visit to London's Guy's Hospital, the prime minister spoke to 81-year-old Lyn Wheeler, who was the first to receive the vaccine there.
"It is really very moving to hear her say she is doing it for Britain, which is exactly right - she is protecting herself, but also helping to protect the entire country," Mr Johnson said.
Earlier, he thanked the NHS, volunteers and "all of the scientists who worked so hard to develop this vaccine".
Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth said it was "absolutely fabulous" to see people getting the vaccine and thanked everyone involved in making it happen.
How the Pfizer vaccine requires two doses

Some 800,000 doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine have been secured by the government to be administered in the coming weeks - although vaccination is not compulsory.
Orders have been placed for 40 million in total - enough for 20 million people, as two courses are needed. However, most supplies are not expected to become available until next year.
Mr Hancock said he expected it to take "several weeks" to get the first group of health workers, care staff and over-80s vaccinated.
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'A momentous day but huge task ahead'​

This is a momentous day, but make no mistake the NHS faces a huge task in rolling out this vaccine.
First, there needs to be a smooth supply - and already there are reports of manufacturing problems, which means the UK is expecting less than half of the 10 million doses of the Pfizer jab it was planning for by the end of the year.
The fact it needs to be kept in ultra-cold storage and in batches of 975 units is an added complication that has meant it cannot yet be taken into care homes to vaccinate residents - the very highest priority group - or sent out to GPs to run vaccination clinics in the community.
NHS bosses hope to receive guidance from the regulator next week on how to get around this.
But these factors illustrate why the UK is still pinning its hopes on a second vaccine developed by Oxford University.
That one can be kept in fridges and so is easier to distribute, is British-made and - what is more - there is an ever-growing stockpile ready to use.
If that vaccine gets the green light from regulators, there will be a genuine hope the first few months of 2021 will see rapid progress in offering jabs to the most vulnerable people, so the UK can return to something closer to normality.

Welp, RIP already to the granny.
Today I was in a doctor's office for a meeting and I overheard the local news station playing on the TV talking about the first vaccinatons.

Why are we giving it to octogenarians and nonagenarians?
 
Today I was in a doctor's office for a meeting and I overheard the local news station playing on the TV talking about the first vaccinatons.

Why are we giving it to octogenarians and nonagenarians?
You'd expect the younger ones to be vaccinated so that their elderly loved ones will be at least safe. Anyway, if it's so deadly to the elderly, why are they giving it to them?
 
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