Betteridge's Law of Headlines.
The answer 'no' would be wrong in this case.
Betteridge's Law of Headlines.
"... there are no adverse outcomes reported from mistranslation of mRNA-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in humans ..."
Is it possible that ...
We reasoned that +1 ribosomal frameshifting during recombinant antigen mRNA translation could lead to presentation of +1 frameshifted products to T cells, and elicit off-target cellular immune response.
Well I ended up taking a covid test, since this thing has been kicking my ass for over a week now... and it came back negative. So I guess it's just a really bad cold. Still not enough to put me in the hospital though.
The results show not only that SARS-CoV-2 is found in the lungs of certain individuals for up to 18 months after infection, but also that its persistence appears to be linked to a failure of innate immunity (the first line of defense against pathogens).
(...)
Initial results from the study indicate that viruses were found in the lungs of some individuals 6 to 18 months after infection even though the virus was undetectable in the upper respiratory tract or blood. Another finding was that the amount of persistent virus in the lungs was lower for the Omicron strain than for the original SARS-CoV-2 strain. "We were really surprised to find viruses in certain immune cells - alveolar macrophages - after such a long period and when regular PCR tests were negative," points out Nicolas Huot, first author of the study and researcher in the Institut Pasteur's HIV, Inflammation and Persistence Unit. "What's more, we cultured these viruses and were able to observed, using the tools we developed to study HIV, that they were still capable of replicating."
COVID-19: the persistence of SARS-CoV-2 in the lungs and the role of innate immunity (Pasteur.fr, Dec 5, 2023)
Take this into consideration:
Yeah, that's one of the more interesting aspects.Flu has been markedly lower than normal everywhere, and markedly lower than C19 since it's less contagious. The precautions taken against C19 seem to have worked even better against the flu.
Covid-19 CFR is higher than flu. However, it's flu (and RSV) that's ramping. A month ago flu was miniscule, not now. The latest 5 day rolling average of ICU cases has almost as many flu as C19 cases. This is the odd thing about C19/Flu. Flu remains strongly seasonal.So C19 has not only killed far more people, the CFR is also considerably higher than the flu.
When you think that the flu is "likely [to] catch up with Covid in the next few weeks," are you then talking about cases, deaths or outbreaks? Or 'all of the above'?
Hmm. Looks like union activity from inflation and a desire to catch up economically. Happening in lots of industries.It's obviously good if C19 isn't stressing health care like last year: ERs stressed as COVID-19 cases increase in San Diego County (San Diego Union-Tribune, Dec 8, 2022)
However, something appears to be stressing health-care workers even if it isn't C19:
I don't think you're right, marting!
And as for people "just going about their business normally. Few masks." I am not sure that you are aware what this means. It's The Atheist's favorite argument whenever his comparisons and predictions are debunked.
It means that more people will get infected, hospitalized and die because they don't take precautions - for their own sake or for the sake of those who are particularly vulnerable.
I doesn't mean that the pandemic is over.
It is not about "lingering traces of a respiratory illness" in general. It's about lingering C19. If you never had it, there's nothing to consider.
Yeah, that's one of the more interesting aspects.
Covid-19 CFR is higher than flu. However, it's flu (and RSV) that's ramping. A month ago flu was miniscule, not now. The latest 5 day rolling average of ICU cases has almost as many flu as C19 cases. This is the odd thing about C19/Flu. Flu remains strongly seasonal.
Hmm. Looks like union activity from inflation and a desire to catch up economically. Happening in lots of industries.
My comment was observational about the general response here. It's not nuts. The plain fact is that in San Diego the C19 death rates are currently lower than those at the peak of a typical flu season let alone a high flu season. Not unreasonable for people to behave similar to how they do during the peak of flu seasons.
So what's your definition of when the pandemic is over? I'm not a fan of labels like pandemic, epidemic, and endemic. Just want to see the numbers and adjust my behavior based on those. From a definitional point of view, flu is pandemic most years and has been forever.
I can't be bothered to explain this to The Atheist again. Since he brags about his ability to read, I'll just refer him to the Science-Based Medicine article again:
Do mRNA vaccines produce harmful “junk proteins” that “gunk up” the cell and cause unintended “off-target” immune responses? (SBM, Dec 11, 2023).
Isn’t something (like adding pseudouridine to mRNA) that increases the likelihood of ribosomal frame shifting a bad thing? The answer is: It depends. It might be.
Dream on. Your definition is wrong
and your claim that the CDC, the ECDC and WHO agree with you is a delusion.
It is nothing new that minimizers make up whatever they want to believe.
The US CDC, European CDC, and the WHO have all stated that Covid-19 is now endemic rather than pandemic.
It depends on who in those organizations you talk to. Representatives from each of those organizations have publicly stated that the pandemic appears to be over, or equivalently, that Covid-19 is now an endemic disease.
Petard, meet hoist.
Maybe you should find a Danish version of the article, because you appear to have completely overlooked this direct quote from the piece you linked:
Isn’t something (like adding pseudouridine to mRNA) that increases the likelihood of ribosomal frame shifting a bad thing? The answer is: It depends. It might be.
The sensible option is to study further. Thankfully, actual scientists don't rely on the kind of assumptions you make and are doing those studies.
I'll have to borrow The Atheist's emotional-support dog for this one:But, antivaxxers might ask, isn’t something (like adding pseudouridine to mRNA) that increases the likelihood of ribosomal frame shifting a bad thing? The answer is: It depends. It might be.
Do mRNA vaccines produce harmful “junk proteins” that “gunk up” the cell and cause unintended “off-target” immune responses? (Science-Based Medicine, Dec 11, 2023)

But, antivaxxers might ask, isn’t something (like adding pseudouridine to mRNA) that increases the likelihood of ribosomal frame shifting a bad thing? The answer is: It depends. It might be. Certainly, in therapeutics we strive to produce exactly the protein intended, no more, no less. However, that doesn’t mean that the findings of this study are evidence that mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines are “dunking up” your cells and causing all sorts of random harmful immune reactions, as antivaxxers are claiming. Now that you have some idea of what this form of frame shifting is and know that it’s also not the horribly “unnatural” thing that antivaxxersis[are] trying to portray it as based on this study, let’s look at the study itself.
So you have now gone from:
To claiming that you might be able to find someone "in those organizations" who would say it
Guess what The Atheist removed from his meticulously cherry-picked sentence from a looong article before he, just as meticulously, capitalized "isn't" to make it appear as if it were the first word of the sentence and bolded the answer ... to the antivaxxers!
Not according to the RNZ website data. It shows a peak of 858 admissions on July 24. For June the numbers were 480, 404, 404 and 462. Current numbers for December 2023 are 410 and 414. We shall have to wait and see what the next 2 weeks bring...![]()
That is pure gold. During almost all of July 2022 the number of hospital cases was over 900, double the present load, so you pick a date that suits your false claim.
Your San Diego link says:
COVID-19: Cases 25,164, Deaths 143, Outbreaks 219.
Influenza: Cases 3,028, Deaths 6, Outbreaks 1.
RSV: Cases 1,944, Deaths 2, Outbreaks 3.
So C19 has not only killed far more people, the CFR is also considerably higher than the flu.
When you think that the flu is "likely [to] catch up with Covid in the next few weeks," are you then talking about cases, deaths or outbreaks? Or 'all of the above'?
COVID-19: Cases 27,891, Deaths 160, Outbreaks 249.
Influenza: Cases 5,225, Deaths 9, Outbreaks 6.
RSV: Cases 2,768, Deaths 4, Outbreaks 4.
San Diego County Respiratory Virus Surveillance Report (San Diego County, Dec 21, 2023)
Official representatives of the organizations, not just some rando within them.
You could at least acknowledge that you were wrong.
Since you are retired, you should have plenty of time to search the internet for links to back up your story instead of simply making up claims about what the CDC, the ECDC and WHO - the actual organizations, not random representatives - allegedly say.
Dream on. Your definition is wrong, and your claim that the CDC, the ECDC and WHO agree with you is a delusion. What the US CDC said was that "as a nation, we now find ourselves at a different point in the pandemic." In the pandemic! Do you understand the meaning of those words?!
WHO says, "The COVID-19 Pandemic is not over yet," and, "This does not mean the pandemic itself is over, but the global emergency it caused is – for now."
I also don't see the ECDC declaring anywhere that the pandemic is over.
It is nothing new that minimizers make up whatever they want to believe. That's why you're "not alone in saying that," but it's a delusion to think that the CDC, the ECDC and WHO back you up on this. Particularly now when the levels of infection are rising all over the world - and in Australia, too, in spite of all the talk about C19 being a seasonal flu.
I have also explained with data and theory why it is likely that the pandemic is already over. You, on the other hand, are arguing that the pandemic is ongoing, while demonstrating that you don't actually know what a pandemic is. Obviously, if you don't know what a pandemic is, you can't know whether we are in one, and any opinion you may have on the question is baseless.
I've explained to you both empirically and theoretically why the pandemic is likely over (and likely has been for more than a year). The best anyone can say is that we don't yet have enough data to make that determination (I'm not 100% sure myself, but I'd put the probability quite high). Public health organizations who, despite what their own epidemiologists say, release contradictory statements like "Covid-19 has reached the endemic stage, but we're not out of the pandemic yet" are making political statements, not empirical or scientific ones.
A pandemic has nothing to do with the absolute incidence of a disease or a disease's severity. A pandemic is, by definition, a worldwide significant increase in the incidence of a disease above its usual level. Once the incidence of a disease diminishes to its usual level, a pandemic is over—by definition. The disease is endemic. That's what we see now. There has been no major spike in incidence since winter of 2021–22. The incidence has settled down to an endemic level with what seem to be predictable increases in winter and summer. I'm not alone in saying that this. The US CDC, European CDC, and the WHO have all stated that Covid-19 is now endemic rather than pandemic.
Covid-19 caused 7 hospitalizations for every 100,000 people in the week ending December 9, accounting for a 3% increase, CDC data shows.
More than three-quarters of US hospital beds are currently in use, which is largely in line with trends over the past three years since the Covid-19 pandemic. However, the CDC warns that rising respiratory virus hospitalizations could strain health care resources in the coming weeks.
Covid-19 variant JN.1 is now the leading cause of infections in the US. (CNN, Dec 23, 2023)
Unprecedented emergency response
With the rallying cry “no one is safe until everyone is safe”, COVAX partners urged the world to place vaccine equity at the heart of the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic, and for every country to have at least enough doses to protect those most at risk.
“The joint efforts of all partners to ensure an equitable response to the pandemic helped protect the futures of millions of children in vulnerable communities,” said Catherine Russell, Executive Director of UNICEF.
COVID-19: WHO designates JN.1 ‘variant of interest’ amid sharp rise in global spread (UN News, Dec 20, 2023)
“After a quieter 2023, it’s a sign that we can’t just assume that Covid has gone away or can’t cause us significant issues any more,” she said, adding as many people had not been eligible for recent booster programmes, they had not had a Covid vaccination for two years.
“This will likely mean they feel sicker [if they do catch Covid] and also [have an] increased risk of long Covid too,” Pagel said. “Given we’ve got millions of leftover vaccines from the autumn booster campaign, why not try to put them in people’s arms instead of the bin and open them out to the general population?”
Covid rising in England and Scotland as new variant spreads around world (TheGuardian, Dec 21, 2023)
A WHO-sponsored international body, tasked with preparing an international agreement on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response has defined a pandemic as "the global spread of a pathogen or variant that infects human populations with limited or no immunity through sustained and high transmissibility from person to person, overwhelming health systems with severe morbidity and high mortality, and causing social and economic disruptions, all of which require effective national and global collaboration and coordination for its control".
Pandemic: Definition (Wikipedia)
You did it! Thanks for that.
I left that out deliberately because it has no relevance and I just knew you'd jump on it as though it did. Well played.
The fact remains that the piece I quoted is correct and you haven't refuted it, because you can't, and instead jumped on a word that makes no change to the meaning of the sentence, unlike the one of yours I quoted.
Your understanding of English seems to get worse by the day.

Not according to the RNZ website data. It shows a peak of 858 admissions on July 24. For June the numbers were 480, 404, 404 and 462. Current numbers for December 2023 are 410 and 414. We shall have to wait and see what the next 2 weeks bring...
Unfortunately Wastewater detections are continuing to go up, with 7,627,081 on Dec 10. This is higher that it was on April 17 2022 when hospital admissions were at 460.
[qimg]http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/picture.php?albumid=1476&pictureid=13897[/qimg]
On a more personal note, on Saturday a guy visited me to trade some stuff. We were in the workshop together for about 30 minutes. The next day he rang up to say he tested positive for Covid. Today his sore throat is gone but he still feels miserable. Looks like I dodged a bullet!