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Culture War Roundup for the week of June 1, 2026

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What do you mean by this?

Maybe it means vaccine went from "get it and you won't get X" to "get it and it reduces your chances of getting X somewhat"

The covid shot didn't reduce your chances of getting it at all, it simply reduced the severity of symptoms (if Pfizer et al are to be believed).

How much of this is a redefinition and how much of it is a more correct clarification on what that thing is.

Even before COVID I was aware vaccines don't prevent an ailment with 100% effectiveness. I get the flu vaccine every year, and maybe 20% of the time I'll still get the flu - I figured most people have had similar experiences.

Did a large swath of people actually believe a vaccine had 100% effectiveness before COVID?

Notoriously, it wasn’t called the flu vaccine but flu shot.

For many vaccines, there was near 100% protection.

Notoriously, it wasn’t called the flu vaccine but flu shot.

Do you have a citation for this?

Here's a paper from the 90s referring to it as vaccine.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7668032/

That's never been true though?

Measles is something like 3% post vaccine, and mumps is something like 12% per a quick google.

Flu is a bit more obvious - the idea behind the flu vaccine is to make the flu uncomfortable but not require hospitalization and result in death, it's never really been entirely preventative.