(VAERS is running months behind, and only catches 1% - 10% of adverse reactions anyway...and there are $billions at stake with these jabs; so the temptation to sweep any problems with the jabs under the rug is overwhelming.)
Note the last paragraph from the snip of the link I provided to Jane then consider how many times have people said something along the lines of “I’d be comfortable with a traditional vaccine.”
The mRNA vaccines are working spectacularly and will likely be the method most vaccines are developed going forward.
But you’re right, it’s not impossible that ADE could become an issue with a variant that hasn’t yet evolved, so in that sense, it’s not over till it’s over. But of course, that applies to recovered COVID too. And, even if we manage to stamp out this virus in the US through herd immunity, COVID will be around unless it burns itself out globally.
https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/exclusives/91648
“[W]hat seems to be beyond doubt is that the vaccinated subjects, over and over, show up with no severe coronavirus cases and no hospitalizations. That is the opposite of what you would expect if ADE were happening,” he wrote.
Furthermore, ADE is an acute problem, and it can be very dramatic. If it was an issue with these vaccines, we would have spotted it by now, said Brian Lichty, PhD, an associate professor in pathology and molecular medicine at McMaster University in Toronto.
“It’ll kill you quickly. In all the places I’m aware of ADE happening, it is an acute, mostly cytokine-driven event,” he told MedPage Today.
The one exception may be an inactivated whole-cell, or “killed,” vaccine developed by China. That vaccine uses alum, the same adjuvant that was used in the measles and RSV vaccines that caused ADE in the 1960s. The Chinese inactivated whole-cell vaccine could “conceivably” generate ADE like those older vaccines, according to Bloom.”