Your study shows that antibodies from natural immunity are more effective than antibodies from vaccination, but says nothing about "vaccines destroying natural immunity," whatever the f**k that phrase is supposed to mean.
The study found that a large portion of the antibodies created by the vaccine are non-neutralizing. That gives a real risk of enhancing infection through Antibody Dependant Enhancement (ADE). Basically your body stops recognizing viruses correctly and simple illnesses become deadly.
Okay, now you've linked to a study showing that the vaccines are effective AND that they seem to increase immune response to stimulus with fungi, which seems like maybe it's a good thing?
"Higher SARS-CoV-2 viral copy number upon diagnosis was associated with a greater chance of anti-nucleocapsid antibody seropositivity (odds ratio 1.90 per 1-log increase; 95% confidence interval 1.59, 2.28)."
Clearly, vaccine-induced immunity is usually effective enough that the body isn't forced to develop different antibodies.
Your study shows that antibodies from natural immunity are more effective than antibodies from vaccination, but says nothing about "vaccines destroying natural immunity," whatever the f**k that phrase is supposed to mean.
And let’s not forget that natural immunity wanes.
The study found that a large portion of the antibodies created by the vaccine are non-neutralizing. That gives a real risk of enhancing infection through Antibody Dependant Enhancement (ADE). Basically your body stops recognizing viruses correctly and simple illnesses become deadly.
Here is some info regarding negative vaccine efficacy https://stevekirsch.substack.com/p/negative-vaccine-efficacy-example?utm_source=substack&utm_campaign=post_embed&utm_medium=web&s=r
Old people, and people with health problems, tend to be triple-vaccinated.
Old people, and people with health problems, tend to require hospitalization (for a million different reasons).
It's no surprise at all if most of the people in a hospital are triple-vaccinated. This indicates nothing about vaccine efficacy.
I can provide examples all day.
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.05.03.21256520v1.full
Okay, now you've linked to a study showing that the vaccines are effective AND that they seem to increase immune response to stimulus with fungi, which seems like maybe it's a good thing?
What is your point, again?
https://igorchudov.substack.com/p/moderna-knew-vaccinated-people-will?s=r
From the study:
"Higher SARS-CoV-2 viral copy number upon diagnosis was associated with a greater chance of anti-nucleocapsid antibody seropositivity (odds ratio 1.90 per 1-log increase; 95% confidence interval 1.59, 2.28)."
Clearly, vaccine-induced immunity is usually effective enough that the body isn't forced to develop different antibodies.
That's a good thing, not a bad thing.