I have had both Covid and Omicron. Covid was far more serious and left me with issue for at least six months if not a year. Omicron took me less than a week to recover fully. Both of these conferred immunity to me. After recovering from Covid I worked in the schools in a place that was certainly exposed repeatedly in Brooklyn. I had no issues at all. I view Omicron as a "booster" to my immune system.
I didn't witness any pressure by anyone in the UK to require vaccination as a condition of liberty - other than the Covid regulations that affected the entire population utilising various statutory frameworks that adapted to epidemic conditions. But I do understand that a mandatory precept is psychologically threatening and can lead to problems for some people. I can also see that there is a theological narrative that has another more sinister meaning. The simple truth is that serving others in an environment that impacts their physical health and wellbeing is not the same as asserting that pastors should be permitted to hold church services during lockdown. Making that comparison or even alluding to it is a mistake I believe. And the problem is that clinically vulnerable people have a greater need for public resources than many people who are capable of riding out the symptoms when they become infected.
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