Finding safety among the "fully vaccinated" is a pipe dream: Corona outbreaks on cruise ships provide a good example of how measures such as vaccinations, a QR exclusion system or 2G rules make no sense. Incessant testing and boosters will not prevent Corona outbreaks in fully vaccinated groups.
It has been clearly demonstrated that even in fully boosted isolated groups, Corona outbreaks still occur. Therefore three jabs combined with negative tests provide no security for those who have been fearful of contracting Covid-19. Their ideal “zero Covid” bubble with no “unclean” unvaccinated people around offers them zero protection.
And while they are now trying to claim otherwise, every single major government health official and pharmaceutical executive had previously categorically declared that Covid shots would stop the virus.
On November 30, there was a Covid-19 outbreak on board the Artania even though the passengers and crew had been 100 percent vaccinated. The ship can accommodate up to 1260 passengers and 537 crew. Three fully vaccinated people on the German cruise liner died from the virus.
On December 5, CBS reported on the the Norwegian cruise ship Breakaway. There were 3 200 people on board and the vaccination rate was 100 percent. The shipowner Norwegian Cruise Line required all passengers and crew to be vaccinated. At least ten people tested positive.
At least one crew member tested positive with the Omicron variant, according to Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL). The infected crew member was from South Africa and had undergone the ten-day quarantine required of employees who join the ship.
Most cruise lines offer so-called “safe bubble” excursions, where passengers do not come into contact with port residents when they go ashore, and NCL relies on all passengers being 100 percent vaccinated.
On the world’s largest cruise ship Symphony of the Seas, dozens of people have tested positive for the Corona virus during a trip. However, all 6 091 passengers and crew had tested negative before the journey commenced and 95 percent on board had been fully vaccinated. Royal Caribbean, the owner of the ship, told CNN that during the tour in the Caribbean, the virus inexplicably made its appearance.
In an effort to stick to the increasingly ridiculous vaccine narrative, the outbreak was blamed “cruise guests who use fake vaccination cards” and “breakthrough infections” while admitting that “no vaccinations are 100 percent effective in...
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