@metal-brain said
Nope.
https://www.businessinsider.com/israel-50-of-delta-variant-cases-vaccinated-severe-2021-6?op=1
That article is about three weeks older than the one I cite and admits the Israeli Health Ministry is still gathering accurate information: "Levy told the state broadcaster Kan Bet that about 40% to 50% of new cases appeared to be people who had been vaccinated, Haaretz reported. He did not appear to specify a time frame for the new cases.
The figure is likely an estimate, as the ministry is still analyzing the cases. On Monday, Levy said that a third of the new daily cases were people who had been vaccinated.
It wasn't clear whether those people had been fully or partially vaccinated."
On top of that, even the article you cite says that COVID cases of the vaccinated are less severe than ones of the unvaccinated: "As of Monday, no severe cases of COVID-19 had been reported from the latest surge, Ran Balicer, an executive at the Israeli healthcare organization Clalit, said in a tweet."
"Although the infections among vaccinated people have alarmed Israelis, the infections do not appear to be as severe as they are in unvaccinated people."
This refutes your claim:
MB: The delta variant is killing vaccinated people more than the unvaccinated because of "antibody dependent enhancement".
No, it isn't: