Could you explain a little better how you conclude that it's scientifically impossible?
1. What number of cases would make it statistically plausible?
2. For the people you know who contracted covid around the time of vaccination, can you ask them about their experiences at the three times I mentioned? That is, do they recall any instances of being near other possibly-infected people in the days before or after vaccination? Do they recall being seated near other people in a small room just before, during, or after the injection?
At first I thought the 10k number sounded high, but crunching the numbers now it doesn’t sound that high after all.
10k/2.7m is 1:270. With 8-10k positives daily in Israel (including those vaccinated), that’s 1:1000
every day, which over the past month would mean 200-300k Israelis (including the 10k you cite who were vaccinated) tested posifivd.
10k/200k would be exactly 95% efficacy. Obviously we didn’t consider that of those 2.7m already vaccinated, more of those can get infected, but we also didn’t consider that it takes time for antibodies to build up.