“...what vaccines are supposed to be.”
One of your examples is polio.
Poliovirus vaccine is an active immunizing agent used to prevent poliomyelitis (polio). It works by causing your body to produce its own protection (antibodies) against the virus that causes polio.
As for smallpox, the vaccine stimulates a person’s immune system to develop antibodies and cells in the blood and elsewhere that can then help the body fight off a real smallpox infection if exposure to smallpox ever occurs.
https://www.fda.gov/vaccines-blood-biologics/vaccines/acam2000-smallpox-vaccine-questions-and-answers#:~:text=The%20vaccine%20stimulates%20a%20person‘s,exposure%20to%20smallpox%20ever%20occurs.
So they are no different in their action than covid 19. And that vaccine doesn’t kill the virus, it just entices the body o do its work. More like herd immunity and time than healing.
Same same. So the vaccines that are supposed to be successful don’t work any different than the sars injections. The body has to do its work. Old people and the ill don’t get it done as well. Hence the higher percentage of dethsw and hospital admittances.
wy69
Again, I point out that Polio and Smallpox, both viruses, don't significantly mutate.
The coronavirus and rhinovirus. They mutate constantly. So far, any attempts at an actual vaccine have been fruitless due to the constant mutations.
So, back to basics. With our current knowledge, there is no effective vaccine for constantly mutating viruses.
So, changing the definition of “Vaccine” in order to allow the ineffective and pointless mRNA Covid shots to be classified as such, was useful in what way?