The way I see most vaccines like Marek's or the human influenza vaccine is that it's a tiny more harmless exposure that signals an immune response so the animal or human immune system has a jump start before the real thing comes along. I don't see that as artificial. Vaccines are not doing the work of the immune system. It's not the vaccine that fights off a virus, it's the immune system that does all the work-hopefully earlier or faster . in viruses like Marek's or Influenza, the viruses grow faster than the antibodies against them are produced. The vaccine gives the immune system an early edge at producing antibodies.
I'm aware of all this, but obviously it's a point of view difference... I see it as artificial interference, you don't. Each to their own and all that. I understand your reasoning on it, though I disagree... Here's my reasoning on it, and of course you are free to disagree.
Natural infection with MDV, or early exposure to it, doesn't prevent them developing the tumors if they're that susceptible; however the vaccine does prevent that, in most cases. That's not a natural progression of immunity or resistance there, as it's assisting susceptible animals to survive it.
Because the vaccines contain artificially altered viral material, that's also, by definition, not natural, and the body does not respond the same way to vaccines that it does to natural raw virus... Again, quite a discrepancy there between what naturally occurs and what doesn't.
It's akin to the difference between the early inoculations for smallpox, and what occurs now. One example is infecting with live virus without altering it, just using it in very small doses, the other example is using altered strains or forms of the virus, rarely in live form.
Marek's is not the only virus that has been around for 100 years and still requires a vaccine. The playing field is unfairly tipped towards the virus winning. Meaning the virus multiplies faster than the antibodies are formed.
All true, but according to most of the research material I've been reading, the very vaccines themselves are blamed for its increasing virulence. (Though I do think the increasing virulence is due to multiple factors including natural evolution or adaption of the virus itself).
The fact remains that the vaccines are not a solution except in the somewhat short term preservation of susceptible animals. Over the long term, (meaning over a decade at the very least, over normal chicken lifetimes anyway), vaccination is not a real solution per se. It's damage control that appears to be causing damage in turn.
One day they may develop vaccines for MDV that are the solution and can utterly eradicate it, but right now they aren't a solution, and it does seem they're making the problem worse; that's still not a reason not to use them for pets, commercial flocks etc, I've got no objection to make to that; as someone's signature says (I forget who) 'we do the best we can with what we have and what we know'. Well, it's something like that anyway, you get the idea.
I think breeding resistance or vaccination is a choice depending on what your goal is. At this time I want my pets to live a long time.
I wasn't arguing that it's either/or, with only breeding for resistance or only vaccinating being the sole answer, I was addressing a few previous posts wherein it was stated that 'everybody should vaccinate'.
I fell that what might work as well as the vaccine is limiting exposure for the first eight months. Such as removing the chicks during the first 2 weeks of mom's passed on resistance for 5 weeks away, then again at 4 months for 4 weeks away. And give their antibodies a chance grow strong away from more virus concentrated areas of the property. I think I'd be willing to do that.
Good luck with that. I wish some research would center on what backyard breeders can do, in terms of limiting exposure or so forth, we need a more over-arching plan of attack against this disease. I never limited exposure with mine, but I do think it's quite likely America and the UK have nastier forms of many diseases we Aussies have, simply due to the population density, combined with the sheer prevalence of reliance on vaccines and antibiotics.
Best wishes.