We (around 50% as a good estimate) who got the cold and got over it have durable life-long immunity...
Having one coronavirus doesn't make you immune to all of them. Having one cold doesn't mean you never get another in your lifetime. Even having SARS-CoV-2 doesn't make you immune in perpetuity to all variants that will arise.
We are the ones who are kicking SARS-cov-2 out of the human population by building herd immunity, and usually by having a sniffle for a day or two.
If you contract SARS-CoV-2, then you are helping towards herd immunity, yes, agreed. It's just that the other route towards herd immunity, taking the vaccine, means you don't have to contract the virus first.
The GMO trans-humans who took the mark are now asymptomatic super-spreaders
The 'GMO trans-humans' bit is just silly, and undermines any attempt you might make at a serious argument. The idea that those who have been vaccinated are now 'super-spreaders' is baseless conjecture. Vaccinating the population reduces cases, hopsitalisations, and deaths.
Have you seen
this thread? I ask because sometimes anti-vaxxers seem to have trouble seeing evidence, almost as if their eyes glance right off anything that might invalidate their faith-based conclusions.
There were no 'variants' until the gene therapy uptake ramped up.
The more of the virus there is in the world, the more variants emerge. This is simply evolution through mutation and natural selection. If you are saying that vaccines can apply selection pressure, then well, yes, of course. But the idea that there are zero errors in virus replication until vaccines emerge and that there were 'no variants' is unscientific nonsense. The current variant of concern, 'delta', arose in unvaccinated India.