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We are making this dream a reality with this announcement. The COVID vaccine has proven to be highly effective, although its logistics were complex due to the new technology.

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Vaccines are seen as magical but expectations should be tempered. Pfizer's vaccine is 95% effective, but efficacy drops over time. Boosters may be needed annually. Moderna is working on a combined flu and COVID vaccine. The future is uncertain, but we must adapt.

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Medicines we know from the COVID vaccine. Very effective, very welcome. The logistics around that vaccine were not straightforward because of the new technologies. We're talking about countries here that do not have advanced

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The Food and Drug Administration granted final approval to the Pfizer COVID vaccine. Those hesitant due to its Emergency Use Authorization may now be more inclined to take it. The vaccine has been proven safe and effective and now has final approval. The speaker urges listeners to take the vaccine to save their life, and potentially the life of another.

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COVID-19 vaccines are available to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science shows they protect against the disease and could save lives. Get vaccinated when you can to help end the pandemic and move the country forward. It's your choice.

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The speakers discuss the effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines and the importance of getting vaccinated. They emphasize that vaccinated individuals are less likely to get infected, transmit the virus, or experience severe illness. They mention that vaccines slightly reduce transmission but do not completely prevent it. The speakers also mention the possibility of waning immunity over time and suggest that booster shots may be necessary. They encourage everyone to get vaccinated and highlight the goal of achieving high immunity levels to return to normalcy. The plan is for every adult to receive a booster shot.

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I spoke with Pfizer's CEO, Albert Bourla, about the approval process. We discussed vaccine safety and serious side effects. Many companies and institutions are embracing the COVID vaccine due to its effectiveness. Logistics are crucial in this process. Translation (if needed): I talked to Pfizer's CEO, Albert Bourla, about the approval process. We talked about vaccine safety and serious side effects. Many companies and institutions are adopting the COVID vaccine because it works well. Logistics are important in this situation.

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Tiffany Doper, the manager in the CCU, states that her team is in the COVID unit. Therefore, her team will be getting the first chances to get the vaccine. She then states that she is feeling dizzy.

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COVID-19 vaccines are now accessible to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science is clear: these vaccines protect against the dangerous and deadly disease. Getting vaccinated can save lives and is crucial in ending the pandemic and progressing as a nation. It's up to each individual to take the first step and get vaccinated when it becomes available to them.

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Moderna and Pfizer discuss vaccine effectiveness. Various incentives for vaccination are mentioned. The importance of vaccination is emphasized to prevent overcrowding in hospitals. Calls for shaming those who refuse vaccines are made. Boosters are encouraged. Vaccinated individuals do not spread the virus. Vaccination is seen as crucial for ending the pandemic. Refusal to vaccinate is criticized for impacting everyone.

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The speakers present a series of emphatic claims about COVID-19 vaccines, emphasizing their effectiveness, transmission-blocking ability, and regulatory implications for public behavior and policy. The core messages include: - The vaccine can stop the spread of these diseases and people will be okay; you’re not going to get COVID if you have these vaccinations. - Vaccines are highly, highly effective. - Vaccinated people do not carry the virus and don’t get sick. - They are really, really good against variants. - Vaccination is not only about individual protection but also reducing transmission to others and helping society return to normal. - The vaccines work well enough that the virus stops with every vaccinated person. - Guidance to get vaccinated: get your first shot, and when due for your second, get your second shot. - The key goal is to stop transmission and raise immunity levels so there is almost no infection. - For vaccinated individuals who are exposed to the virus, the virus does not infect them, and cannot use that person to spread to others. - When people are vaccinated, they can feel safe that they are not going to get infected. - If you are vaccinated, you’re not going to be hospitalized, you’re not going to be in the ICU, and you’re not going to die. - A vaccinated person cannot be used as a host to go get more people. - If you are fully vaccinated, you no longer need to wear a mask. - Anyone who is fully vaccinated can participate in indoor and outdoor activities, large or small, without wearing a mask or practicing physical distancing. - A critique is offered about misinformation: companies and personalities are making money by peddling lies and allowing misinformation that can kill their own customers and supporters; it is described as wrong and immoral. - Financial comparison is made: there has been over a 20-to-1 return (implying a large gain), and a counterfactual calculation suggests that if money had been invested in the S&P 500 with reinvested dividends, the result would be about $17,000,000,000, but the speaker claims people think it’s $200,000,000,000. Overall, the transcript presents a tightly framed, high-confidence portrayal of vaccines as highly effective at preventing infection, transmission, hospitalization, and death, while advocating vaccination as a path to normalcy and criticizing misinformation, alongside a financial remark about two-way returns and investment comparisons.

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COVID-19 vaccines are available to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science shows that these vaccines can protect you and your loved ones from this deadly disease. Getting vaccinated is crucial to ending the pandemic and progressing as a nation. It's your choice.

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The speaker explains that messenger RNA vaccines, like the one approved in the UK and pending FDA approval, are safe because they only contain a small piece of genetic material in a lipid bag. While the long-term effects are unknown, the speaker believes they won't cause problems. A woman willingly received the Pfizer vaccine and encourages others to do the same. It is mentioned that virologist Dr. Ovita Fuller, who played a key role in securing emergency use authorizations for COVID vaccines, passed away from a non-COVID-related illness. American physicians are urging people to get vaccinated and caution against trusting random individuals on social media. The speaker emphasizes the safety of these vaccines.

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In this video, the speakers discuss various topics related to vaccines and COVID-19. They mention the importance of vaccination campaigns and the potential side effects. They also talk about different regions and their response to the pandemic. The speakers touch on the issue of vaccine hesitancy and the need for accurate information. Overall, they emphasize the significance of vaccines in combating the virus.

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The AstraZeneca vaccine is safe and effective against Covid-19. It is recommended to get vaccinated with any available vaccine as they are all safe and effective. They not only protect against severe illness but also reduce the risk of spreading the virus to others. Looking back at the past year, we have made significant progress with three vaccines that are safe and effective. It is advised for everyone to get vaccinated against Covid-19 to effectively control the pandemic.

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Speaker: Noted claims about the Amish and COVID. - The speaker traveled to Lancaster County, Amish country, visiting the house of a relative of Gideon King, described as the one person, the only known person in the Amish community who supposedly died from COVID. They say there may be up to five people, but the names of five people were not provided. A $2,500 reward on Twitter was offered for names of more than five people in Lancaster County who died from COVID; no one could name more than one person, and they all named Gideon King. - The speaker visited the house of Sam King, a relative of Gideon King. Sam said he doesn’t know if Gideon actually died from COVID. They think Gideon died in the hospital. - If there were five Amish people who died, this would mean the Amish death rate was 90 times lower than the infection fatality rate of the United States. - The explanation offered: this is possible because the Amish aren’t vaccinated and didn’t follow a single guideline of the CDC. They did not lockdown, did not mask, did not social distance, did not vaccinate, and there were no mandates to get vaccinated in the Amish community. - The speaker asserts there are no autistic kids in the Amish community, claiming it is very rare to find kids with ADD, autoimmune disease, PANDA, PANS, epilepsy, or other chronic diseases. - The speaker states the US government has studied the Amish for decades, but there has never been a report released to the public. The stated reason is that such a report would show that not following guidelines leads to better health. - The speaker concludes there is no public report after decades of study because it would be devastating to the narrative and would show that the CDC has been harming the public for decades.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the COVID-19 vaccine episode, challenging why the vaccine was pursued as a public health solution and exploring deeper incentives behind the program. - A knowledgeable figure at the stand answered a burning question: did they know the vaccine wouldn’t be effective from the start and could be dangerous? The answer given was that it was “a test of a technology.” The exchange suggests the broader aim was testing an entire program of control previewed in Event 2019. - They ask whether inoculation was necessary on billions, noting it could have been tested on a much smaller population. If shots had been basically empty or inert, the data could have been spun to claim success and end the pandemic, preventing injuries from appearing. The absence of that approach remains a mystery. - The speakers point to high pre-vaccine seroprevalence in 2020, including studies from South Dakota showing 50-60% seroprevalence before vaccine release, implying that a saline shot or no shot could have achieved “indomicity” (immunity) without a vaccine. - They discuss why people might fear vaccines and interpret the broader impact: the public is waking up to something terrible having occurred, as it revealed readiness to lie, potential data quality concerns, and risk to pregnant women and healthy children who might get little justification for risk. - The disease’s lethality is framed as greatest among the very old or very sick; for others, it was less deadly, with natural evolution potentially reducing vulnerability over time. - The mRNA platform was touted as a means to outrun mutations, but the timeline to release was still insufficient to stay ahead of natural change. They note accelerated development was the fastest vaccine in history, from detection to inoculation, reducing the timeline by about a year or two, yet not fast enough. - Political and logistical factors delayed release; there is mention that it would not have appeared under Trump and that Eric Topol argued to delay the rollout. Fauci reportedly sent Moderna back to trials due to insufficient racial diversity in participants. - The discussion questions whether the vaccine qualifies as a normal consumer product, given ongoing subsidies, mandates, indemnifications, wartime-like supports, and propaganda. They wonder if there has been an ongoing two-century revolt by industry against public scrutiny, with public interest repeatedly leading to pushback and rebranding. - A central theme is the sophistication of pharma: the “game of pharma” involves owning an IP-based health claim, crafting supportive research, convincing it is safe and effective, achieving standard-of-care status, securing mandates and government funding, and leveraging ongoing propaganda. They describe pharma as a long-running arms race with deep institutional knowledge, implying that it is far more capable of shaping reality than the public realizes.

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The speaker explains that messenger RNA vaccines, like the one approved in the UK and pending FDA approval, are safe because they only contain a small piece of genetic material in a lipid bag. While the long-term effects are unknown, the speaker believes they won't cause problems. A woman willingly received the Pfizer vaccine and encourages others to do the same. It is mentioned that Dr. Ovita Fuller, a virologist instrumental in securing emergency use authorizations for COVID vaccines, passed away from a non-COVID-related illness. American physicians are urging people to get vaccinated and trust their expertise over random individuals on social media. The speaker reiterates that these vaccines are very safe, possibly even safer than other vaccines.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 vaccines are now accessible to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science is clear: these vaccines protect against the dangerous and deadly disease, potentially saving lives. We encourage everyone to get vaccinated as soon as possible. By doing so, we can take the first step towards ending the pandemic and progressing as a nation. The decision is in your hands.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 vaccines are now accessible to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The vaccines are scientifically proven to protect against this deadly disease and can potentially save lives. We strongly encourage you to get vaccinated as soon as it becomes available to you. By doing so, you will contribute to ending the pandemic and advancing our nation. The decision is in your hands.

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Speaker 0 reassures that the situation isn't that bad and emphasizes the importance of proven protection against COVID. Speaker 1 and Speaker 2 discuss the need for everyone to get vaccinated to combat the virus. They mention the speed of vaccine development and the importance of avoiding misinformation. Speaker 0 highlights the effectiveness of vaccines and Speaker 2 explains the process of getting vaccinated for free through registration. They express their eagerness to keep their community safe and encourage others to get vaccinated. The transcript ends with Speaker 1 eagerly requesting to receive the vaccine.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 vaccines are now accessible to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The vaccines are scientifically proven to protect against this dangerous and deadly disease, potentially saving lives. We strongly encourage you to get vaccinated as soon as it's possible for you. This is the initial step towards ending the pandemic and progressing our nation. The responsibility lies with each individual.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
COVID-19 vaccines are now accessible to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science is clear: these vaccines protect against the dangerous and deadly disease, potentially saving lives. We strongly encourage you to get vaccinated as soon as it's possible for you. This is the first step towards ending the pandemic and progressing as a nation. The decision is in your hands.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The COVID-19 vaccines are available to millions of Americans and will soon be available to everyone. The science shows that these vaccines can protect you and your loved ones from this deadly disease. Getting vaccinated is crucial in ending the pandemic and progressing as a nation. It's your choice.

Armchair Expert

Steven Pinker Returns (on common knowledge) | Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
Guests: Steven Pinker
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Common knowledge binds groups more tightly than private belief alone. Steven Pinker explains private knowledge versus common knowledge, showing that common knowledge is the chain: I know that you know that I know. He illustrates with rock-paper-scissors, the emperor’s new clothes, and everyday language. When something is conspicuously public, it becomes common knowledge and enables coordination—from a coffee rendezvous to mass protests. He emphasizes tracking data rather than chasing headlines, arguing that long-run trends in health, poverty, and life expectancy show progress even as today’s news highlights danger. He cites Our World in Data and real-world metrics: war deaths, longevity, maternal mortality, and child survival. The conversation notes that democracy has improved over centuries but has leveled off more recently, and that conflicts such as Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan test that progress. COVID becomes a case study in science communication: vaccines helped, but calibration of confidence and risk remains essential. From there the talk turns to focal points and conventions that solve coordination problems. Thomas Schelling’s clock at Grand Central Station becomes a model for aligning actions without explicit agreement. Lines on maps, borders, and round-number focal points can reduce conflict even when boundaries are imperfect. The stock market is described as a beauty contest: investors guess what others will pick, fueling memes and network effects, including the GameStop frenzy and crypto advertising that relies on social momentum rather than intrinsic product value. Pinker ties this to Super Bowl ads, where common knowledge justifies a premium and turn mass attention into social proof. He contrasts anonymous gifts with reputation-driven philanthropy, citing David Pins’ taxonomy of status signals and the way people seek social approval. He also discusses how donors balance recognition with impact, showing the social dynamics behind generosity. The third thread probes science, politics, and AI. Academia’s perceived liberal tilt is debated with a defense of free speech and Mill’s warning that truth benefits from criticism, even when experts err. He critiques COVID communication and argues for cautious calibration under uncertainty, plus the costs and benefits of policy choices. He cautions against deplatforming that stifles knowledge, insisting that inquiry should remain open even amid disagreement. On AI, he argues against existential panic, noting that AI is a crafted tool rather than a sentient force, and progress depends on design and regulation. The talk closes with a central claim: progress comes from maintaining common knowledge and coordination, leveraging data, and preserving open inquiry, even as disagreement persists.
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