The whole idea of airborne transmission is so vague that, technically speaking, aerosol transmission can also be regarded as airborne transmission. It's not like there is absolutely no moisture in the air.
If after vaccination/inoculation, people are still susceptible to infections but will be asymptomatic and can pass the virus on, isn't it safer to not be vaccinated (for now) so that we have a higher chance of identifying cases earlier? I'm not an anti-vaxxer but it seems the vaccines are ineffective to contain the pandemic at this juncture.
Split team arrangement at work exposed many lazy people who doesn't do much when they are working on site. Yet some of these mofos could still get promoted and many hardworking ones didn't get the opportunity. What the holy fuck.
The pandemic is not going to end soon. Especially after looking at how many people resorting to merely 'thoughts and prayer' to "fight" the pandemic but never doing anything useful to help the situation. Think about it, if God gave us this pandemic, do you really think just by praying to Him will make Him lift it off? God scattered Israel during the Babylonian exile and the Jewish diaspora, you think He gathered them back after incessant 'thoughts and prayer'? No chance.
The longer this pandemic drags out because of people rushing to resume travelling overseas and gathering with others, the more opportunity the virus get to mutate and be more resilient and contagious. Basically, the more defiant humans are, the more we are incubating a super virus.
History textbooks and classes often teach about wars, conflicts, and great men who did great things. But often disregarded is the fact that the greatest agent of human history is not humans, it is diseases.