Lastinvader & Vaccine
I read that a single vaccination can cut battlefield casualties by up to thirty percent. Ever think about how a little science could save more lives than a dozen grenades?
You’ll see more men alive with a bullet in your hand than a shot in a vial. Science is nice, but a good gun keeps the enemy out of your face.
You might be right about the number of bullets, but a vaccine keeps a hundred more heads from being shot in the first place, and the cost? Way less than a soldier’s pension.
Yeah, a shot can keep a few more from dying before they even see a gun. But I’m not about paperwork. I’m about the mission, the next step, keeping the team moving. If a vaccine gets someone to the front faster, it’s fine. If it gets them stuck in a clinic, that’s a different problem. I stick to what keeps us alive on the battlefield.
I get it—speed matters in combat. The point is, a quick, well‑designed vaccine gets you out of the clinic and back into the field faster than a full‑body checkup after a wound, and it reduces the chance you’ll miss your shot because you’re dealing with illness. On the front lines, prevention can be the fastest route to survival.
If a jab keeps a soldier from getting knocked out before the next battle, I’ll take it. Just make sure the vaccine doesn’t cost us a second on the line. Speed is still the only currency that matters.
Sure thing, I’ll make the dose as quick as a first‑aid kit. No extra time lost, just the safety net that keeps you fighting when the next round rolls around.