View Single Post
  #72   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Bod[_3_] Bod[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,868
Default OT: Experimental vaccines and your health

On 07/02/2021 17:07, Muggles wrote:
On 2/7/2021 11:07 AM, Bod wrote:
On 07/02/2021 17:03, Muggles wrote:
On 2/7/2021 10:44 AM, Bod wrote:
On 07/02/2021 16:43, Muggles wrote:
On 2/7/2021 10:38 AM, Bod wrote:
On 07/02/2021 16:35, Muggles wrote:
On 2/6/2021 10:57 AM, Retirednoguilt wrote:
On 2/5/2021 9:32 PM, rbowman wrote:
On 02/05/2021 10:20 AM, Retirednoguilt wrote:
On 2/5/2021 11:14 AM, Muggles wrote:
On 2/4/2021 10:29 PM, Roger Blake wrote:
On 2021-02-04, Muggles wrote:
Gene therapy ...

I will not be vaccinated. Period.


I ONLY consider being vaccinated after such shots have been
tested for
several years.* By then, the majority of negative reactions
have been
documented, along with why those reactions happened.* I get a
flu shot
every fall because I've seen those work with very little
allergic
reactions.* The covid "vaccines" have not been tested long
enough for
me to even consider taking one of those shots.** I'm no
guinea pig.
If other people WANT to be experimented on, that's their
business.


When in the history of vaccination approval and administration
in the
U.S. was there was a vaccine that demonstrated a statistically
significant incidence of delayed side effects (serious or
otherwise)
occurring more than a few months following inoculation?
Please provide
a reputable reference.* I don't think that you'll be able to
find one.
Yet, on the basis of fear, unsubstantiated by any facts, you
consider
the potential risk of such a situation greater than the
extremely well
documented substantial risk of becoming crippled or killed by an
infection with one of the COVID variants.* For the sake of
yourself,
your family members, friends, and possible co-workers, examine
the facts
and reconsider your decision!


When in the history of vaccination approval and administration
in the U.S. was there was a mRNA vaccine?


That's a non sequitur; completely irrelevant.* In the past, many
new vaccines when first approved and administered, were
developed by novel techniques and had never before been used to
develop a safe and effective vaccine.* You think the smallpox
vaccine was safe? How about the Sabin polio vaccine?* Not even
discussing vaccines, how many people have life-threatening
allergies to the penicillins or other families of life-saving
medicines?* Should we ban penicillin? Should we place a strict
embargo on peanuts and ban them entirely from the marketplace
because a small percentage of the population is at risk? All
decisions involving public health constitute best judgement
after a risk vs. benefit analysis.

Risk vs. benefit.* Yes, we might be able to extend experimental
vaccine protocols for many months or even years but there's no
objective endpoint that can be set.* How long is long enough?
Why choose any particular length of followup?* Usually it's a
compromise between recruiting and retaining sufficient subjects
to enable an appropriate magnitude of statistical significance
when the data is analyzed, the cost per month of keeping a
research team funded to maintain the protocol, the severity of
the disease threat, and what is known about the biology of how
we respond to the introduction of similar foreign substances
into our bodies. mRNA is not a novel molecule, recently
synthesized in the lab. It's produced by cells and viruses and
needed to maintain that specie's viability in nature.* Our cells
need mRNA to fabricate proteins.* We've known about corona
viruses for decades and none have ever even been suspected much
less documented of being either mutagenic or carcinogenic.* We
know how lethal and transmissible the COVID corona virus has
been. The risk vs benefit of administering mRNA vaccines against
the COVID virus strongly favors the use of the preapproval human
clinical trial period that was selected.


The goal of vaccines is to trick our immune systems into
producing antibodies that target a specific virus attacking our
bodies. Why not skip traditional vaccines and go straight to
treating the most sick people with covid antibody plasma?


If it actually works, don't you think they'd be using it already
instead of vaccinating?


There are many more people who have had covid and recovered on
their own.* They have antibodies that can be donated and used to
SAVE the most vulnerable to this virus.* Why NOT do that?
Antibodies are the goal of treating people with vaccines.* Those
who are VERY SICK can (and do) benefit from infusions of antibody
plasma.


Covid: 'Convalescent plasma no benefit to hospital patients'

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-55681051

Of course you know better than the experts.

I know the goal of vaccines: to trick the body into creating antibodies.

I also KNOW of a man who was literally close to dying with covid
caused pneumonia and a blood infection. He should have died.* BUT,
they gave him his first antibody plasma treatment and the same day he
began improving.* They continued to give him several other antibody
plasma treatments and 3 days later is tested negative, his pneumonia
and blood infection responded to treatment, and he DRAMATICALLY
IMPROVED in a relatively short period of time.

Why NOT use this approach with those who get very ill because of age
and comorbities? Antibodies literally STOP the reproduction of covid
and it dies.* This allows the individual to put all their bodies
energy into fighting the infections covid caused.



The trials disagreed with you.


Those trials are not recent, either.* There wasn't a large sampling of
people who HAD antibodies, either.* Now, there is.


Last month, january 20th.