We have several hundred million people who have received. I’m one. We will know but not seeing much so far and it’s wiped out covid.
If covid was really wiped out, then there would be no masking or social distancing required OR even recommended - anywhere; every state would be completely open for business; no business would require masks upon entering; hospitals and nursing homes would allow patients to see their loved ones...
But none of that is the point, really. A condition that is 98-99% treatable shouldn't be justification for an experiment on the human population. Medical and health professionals have genuine reservations about this "vaccine" treatment, and there are just too many unanswered questions about potential problems. No one - unless they can read the future - knows what the "vaccines" will do to individuals and to the masses, in the coming years. No one. They can hypothesize, presume, conjecture, make educated guesses, But no one knows for sure.
2 weeks out from #2 Pfizer jab and I feel fine.
So do I.
I’m completely immune without your poison. Never skipped a beat. Continued to socialize, prohibition style restaurants and bars had parties. Kids came home from college with their friends. Worked out in gym, teach school. Nothing. But I will never take your poison. Natural evolutionary immunity.
It is a recent treatment.
Covid peaked long ago.
It will take 18 mos to 3 years for the autoimmune diseases to show. By then, people won’t associate them with the covid treatment.
People will be dependent on drugs to cope.
Big Pharma will have millions of new customers.
Customers are totally screwed
You.cannot reverse the mRNA.
We will find out many things, but we cannot be sure it has wiped out covid at all. We had very few new cases last summer without a vaccine and it came roaring back in the fall/winter. What we are seeing now may just be “seasonal” like last summer. Nobody knows how long these vaccines may be effective - I suspect all the talk about booster shots and the fact that they require 2-shots spaced 4 weeks apart suggest that they know that the efficacy, if any, is short lived. It does seem that they prevent, in most cases, serious illness resulting from infection and that is a good thing. If they don’t stop the spread of disease, helping people from serious illness is good and it will spread a natural immunity among those who do catch it. But I wonder if the vaccines aren’t just buying time on a hope and prayer that the virus won’t mutate further, or will actually encourage more dangerous strains to “escape”.
Slow down, pilgrim.
(in just 4 months)
We will find out in the long term.