With both Trump and Q silent, some of the "Digital soldiers" feel frustrated, confused, impatient and unsure what they're supposed to be doing.
A Q believer tells green that this is the "ten days of darkness" and the Great Awakening might happen on Saturday.
But green asks about Michigan: "How can Biden’s policies wake them up when those same policies are what they want?"
Green continues: "some of us have had enough of nobody actually doing anything except talk".
"what are we waiting for? What is Trump waiting for? What is the military waiting for?"
"You’re no better than the left."
"Can’t you understand we need something?"
There's a worrying piece here. QAnon radicalised thousands, maybe millions. But it also told them to stay home and trust the plan. It radicalised but demobilised.
Some people are losing faith in Q and the plan, but they're keeping all the beliefs about an evil cabal of child-eating deep staters, or Communist-controlled Democrats coming to poison your family. Once they stop trusting the plan, what will they do?
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Updated vaccine data: Maccabi reports only 31 new Covid cases among 163,000 people who had their second Pfizer dose 16 or more days ago. None of the cases were serious or required hospitalisation.
The group was observed for the period from 7-16 days after receiving their second dose. Maccabi estimates that this translates to a 92% effectiveness compared to the unvaccinated (but locked-down) population.
For comparison, among their unvaccinated members, Maccabi saw 6437 infections over the same period (the HMO has 2.4M members total).
Vaccination stats of over-80s in England revealing huge racial disparity, with white people more than double as likely to have been vaccinated as black people.
A similar pattern has been seen in Israel, where Israeli Arabs have low coronavirus vaccine uptake, despite relatively easy access. Vaccine uptake also lower among Ultra-Orthodox Jews.
In Israel, conspiracy theories about the vaccine are spreading widely on Arab/Palestinian social media, which could be contributing to hesitancy.
1. Let's assume all the 428k vaccinated people are over 60. They aren't, but most will be and this assumption will tend to conservatism in the analysis.
There are 1,471,000 over-60s in Israel. In the last week, 4,723 of them received their first positive coronavirus test, which is 0.3% of the total cohort.
Very positive vaccine news: Israeli HMO Maccabi reports just 20 positive coronavirus tests out of 128,000 people who had their second Pfizer shot a week or more ago. None of the 20 were serious cases.
The HMO says most of the 20 were tested due to a known exposure to a confirmed Covid-19 case. Most were over 55. Half had a preexisting condition. None had a fever over 38.5°C. None needed hospitalisation.
Not all 128k were tested, only people with known exposures or symptoms. So the real number is probably a little higher. But most of the 128k will be over 60, because they got vaccinated first. This suggests the vaccine is extremely effective.
Second Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine shot. Let's do this.
Vaccinated! Two shots, 22 days apart.
I woke up this morning with, basically, a hangover. That tired, groggy, mildly headachey feeling. Now I'm also feeling a bit achey like mild flu. Both of these are common side effects and usually are gone by the second day, so I'm not worried.
In this Covid wave, Israel has seen more young pregnant women with no comorbidities hospitalised than before. Of seven serious cases tested so far, six had the British B117 coronavirus variant.
This could just be a sampling issue. The B117 variant is something like 30-50% of all cases in Israel now. And perhaps it's more prevalent in ultra-Orthodox communities where the birth rate is high so there are a lot of pregnant women.
The UK has not reported that the B117 variant was more dangerous to pregnant women. As far as I know, no other country has seen this (yet).