What is a Vaccine? Jan 2023 |
I grew up with the understanding that a vaccine is an immunization or an inoculation that prevents you from getting a particular disease. It works like this; inject a small amount of the pathogen and your body makes antibodies to keep the infection in check. A vaccine has traditionally had two properties: it prevents illness, and it stops transmission of a disease to others. IE, I got the mumps vaccine when as a child, and now I don't worry about getting mumps, nor transmitting it to others. In December of 2020, the Covid "vaccines" were rolled out. However, no testing had been done by the vaccine makers prior to its release to see if their product actually prevented transmission. So the obvious question is, why is it called a vaccine? If prevention of transmission was pharma's untested hypothesis, they could have done post-release studies on the vaccinated public. But neither the vaccine makers nor the health regulators did any such studies. Data later confirmed that the vaccine does not in fact prevent transmission. The CDC, like the WHO, apparently has the power to alter medical language, but did not correct their mistake and re-brand the vaccine as a therapeutic. Instead, in September of 2021, the CDC changed the definition of vaccine! Now a vaccine is indistinguishable from a therapeutic: Original Definition: September 2021 Definition: Not only was the general public unaware of this definition change, most were unaware that the injection was never tested for stopping transmission in the first place, and many thought it would prevent them from getting sick entirely. So who can we blame for such wide spread misunderstanding about the properties of the Covid "vaccine"? The following quotes may provide some insight: Anthony Fauci: "when people are vaccinated, they can feel safe that they are not going to get infected." Or it might have been the term "breakthrough" infection which could have given people the impression that catching the virus was a rare event for vaccinated people. As we saw, breakthroughs are actually common, especially it seems, for vaccine advocates, including Fauci, Trudeau, Wallensky and Biden, who despite being well jabbed, got Covid more than once. Or more likely it was the vaccine mandates that confused people. What conceivable reason is there to mandate that people take a jab to keep their jobs, to go to concerts, or to travel, if the jabbed are just as contagious as the unjabbed? I can't seem to think of one. Could it be that some people took the vaccine promotion song "Community Immunity" a little too literally? The net result of this massive misunderstanding about the effects of the Covid "vaccine" was this; vaccinated people mingled at work, at concerts, with their families and during travel, many thinking that they were safe from infection, and that they were not infectious to others. To accept the narrative wherein Covid vaccines reduce the severity of Covid for the individual, but do not stop transmission, is to reckon with this; "vaccinated" people who did not limit their interactions, represent the largest demographic of superspreaders during Covid. And speaking of superspreaders, we can thank the usual suspects for this fertile ground of confusion and disinformation: WHO, FDA, CDC, NIH, and the MSM, all funded by big pharma, and all setting "health security" policy for governments around the world. But should we really be surprised considering all the conflicts of interest between governments, pharma and the mass media? - Pharma is the biggest political lobby group in US, UK and Canada. |