ehowton: (Default)

Yes, the COVID vaccines were developed quickly.

This basically boils down to it not being The Year of our Lord 1796.

Let me explain: We didn't have to "figure out" how vaccines work in 2019. Also, scientists in the 1800s didn't have access to super-compute clusters deconstructing protein models. I will admit that my layman explanation sounds far-fetched to the Luddite crowd clutching their equally-incomprehensible space-comm microcomputers, yet time and again I see the argument, "They were developed too quickly" and I realized they don't understand that's how linear time actually works.
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Date/Time: 2021-09-23 17:04 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] homunculus.livejournal.com
also, they've been working on a covid vaccine (albeit not consistently) since ~2002 when SARS (SARS-CoV-1) first hit.
Date/Time: 2021-09-23 17:06 (UTC)Posted by: [identity profile] homunculus.livejournal.com
and most countries that could threw a bunch of money into r&d when they realized it's gna be a global pandemic this time, and cynically when they realized there's money to be made from it, as well.

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