OK, so a "Weak" TB correlation. How about telling this to parents whose children come home with TB.
This is a data driven detailed and stupid analysis as the USA is vaccinated more than 90%, and so adding 4% to the population of unvaccinated people will not really add a disease spread.
However, as the unvaccinated illegals continue to come and there is a tipping point. Already TB is at that tipping point. Keep the borders wide open, add more unvaccinated people, and your data will change. TB will rise for sure.
To say historical disease statistics are not a reason to keep the border closed is a mental midget mistake. The reason to close the border, have proper immigration, and vaccinate people before they are let in, is because if you do not, you will find over time the population of unvaccinated will grow to a tipping point where diseases start spreading to the unvaccinated citizens - of which today are at least 30 million people. maybe more.
When I land in countries in African, Guinea in West Africa comes to mind, I have to show my vaccinated card, and if I do not have a current vaccination, they have a nurse to give it to me.
So, it appears the West Africans can teach David J. Bier a thing or two.
OK, so a "Weak" TB correlation. How about telling this to parents whose children come home with TB.
This is a data driven detailed and stupid analysis as the USA is vaccinated more than 90%, and so adding 4% to the population of unvaccinated people will not really add a disease spread.
However, as the unvaccinated illegals continue to come and there is a tipping point. Already TB is at that tipping point. Keep the borders wide open, add more unvaccinated people, and your data will change. TB will rise for sure.
To say historical disease statistics are not a reason to keep the border closed is a mental midget mistake. The reason to close the border, have proper immigration, and vaccinate people before they are let in, is because if you do not, you will find over time the population of unvaccinated will grow to a tipping point where diseases start spreading to the unvaccinated citizens - of which today are at least 30 million people. maybe more.
When I land in countries in African, Guinea in West Africa comes to mind, I have to show my vaccinated card, and if I do not have a current vaccination, they have a nurse to give it to me.
So, it appears the West Africans can teach David J. Bier a thing or two.