You have the facility to produce en mass, something that once given out will no longer make a profit, so there’s no incentive to make a factory, but you’re an EA true and true so you build the thing you need and make the doses. Now you have doses in a warehouse somewhere.
You have to take the vaccine all over the admittedly large state, but with a good set of roads and railroads, this is an easily solvable problem, right?
You have a pile of vaccine, potentially connections with Texan hospitals who thankfully ALL speak English and you have the funding from your company to send people to distribute the vaccine.
There may or may not be a cold chain needed so you might need refrigerated trucks, but this is a solvable problem right? Cold chain trucks can’t be that more expensive than regular trucks?
So you go out and you start directing the largest portion of vaccines to go to the large cities and health departments, just to reach your 29 million people that you’re trying to hit. You pay a good salary to your logisticians and drivers to get the vaccines where they need to go.
In a few days, you’re able to effectively get a large chunk of your doses to where they need to go, but now you run into the problem of last mile logistics, where you need to get a dose to a person.
That means that the public has to get the message that this is available for them, where they can find it and how they can do it. God forbid there be a party that is trying to PSYOP that your vaccine causes Malarial cancer or something because that would be a problem.
You’ll have your early adopters, sure but after some time the people that will follow prudent public health measures will drop off and the lines will be empty.
You’ll still have 14 million doses, which have they been properly stored? This is of course accounting for the number of Texans who just won’t get a vaccine or are perhaps too young.
So you appeal to the state government to pass a law that all 8th graders need to have this once in a lifetime vaccine and in a miracle, they make it a law. You move the needle a little bit. 7.5 Million Texans are under 18, but those might be the easiest to get as they’re actively interacting with the government at least in the capacity of education.
And as you might guess, this isn’t about Texas. This is every country.
Pretend that you’re a Texan vaccine distributor.
You have the facility to produce en mass, something that once given out will no longer make a profit, so there’s no incentive to make a factory, but you’re an EA true and true so you build the thing you need and make the doses. Now you have doses in a warehouse somewhere.
You have to take the vaccine all over the admittedly large state, but with a good set of roads and railroads, this is an easily solvable problem, right?
You have a pile of vaccine, potentially connections with Texan hospitals who thankfully ALL speak English and you have the funding from your company to send people to distribute the vaccine.
There may or may not be a cold chain needed so you might need refrigerated trucks, but this is a solvable problem right? Cold chain trucks can’t be that more expensive than regular trucks?
So you go out and you start directing the largest portion of vaccines to go to the large cities and health departments, just to reach your 29 million people that you’re trying to hit. You pay a good salary to your logisticians and drivers to get the vaccines where they need to go.
In a few days, you’re able to effectively get a large chunk of your doses to where they need to go, but now you run into the problem of last mile logistics, where you need to get a dose to a person.
That means that the public has to get the message that this is available for them, where they can find it and how they can do it. God forbid there be a party that is trying to PSYOP that your vaccine causes Malarial cancer or something because that would be a problem.
You’ll have your early adopters, sure but after some time the people that will follow prudent public health measures will drop off and the lines will be empty.
You’ll still have 14 million doses, which have they been properly stored? This is of course accounting for the number of Texans who just won’t get a vaccine or are perhaps too young.
So you appeal to the state government to pass a law that all 8th graders need to have this once in a lifetime vaccine and in a miracle, they make it a law. You move the needle a little bit. 7.5 Million Texans are under 18, but those might be the easiest to get as they’re actively interacting with the government at least in the capacity of education.
And as you might guess, this isn’t about Texas. This is every country.