Posted on 03/31/2022 2:04:08 PM PDT by week 71
"I SERIOUSLY expect that a series of new highly virulent and highly infectious SARS-CoV-2 (SC-2) variants will now rapidly and independently emerge in highly vaccinated countries all over the world and that they will soon spread at high pace. I expect the current pattern of repetitive infections and relatively mild disease in vaccinees to soon aggravate and be replaced by severe disease and death. Unfortunately, there is no way vaccinees can rely on assistance from their innate immune system to protect against coronaviruses as their relevant innate IgM antibodies are increasingly being outcompeted by infection-enhancing vaccinal Abs, which are continuously recalled due to the circulation of highly infectious Omicron variants. In contrast, Omicron’s high infectiousness would enable the non-vaccinated to train their innate immune defense against SC-2 while the infectious and pathogenic capacity of the new SC-2 variants would be debilitated in the non-vaccinated for lack of infection-enhancing Abs in their blood. Unless..."
(Excerpt) Read more at voiceforscienceandsolidarity.org ...
They’re getting ready to release another variant.😬
Veterinarians have four years postgraduate training just as do medical students. Some of my classes were with veterinary students while I was studying biomedical engineering. The classes were difficult.
@ post 20. No
Well, more to the point, there are less restrictions on administering new medications and vaccines to animals, since you don’t have to worry about consent laws or other human experimentation regulations. So veterinarians are often much more experienced than ordinary doctors in deploying new vaccines and seeing the effects on real populations. They are probably the one group of medical professionals who have, for example, the most real world experience with Antibody-dependent Enhancement, since they have actually experienced recent catastrophic failures of livestock vaccines that were caused by ADE.
Of course if you cause such a catastrophe in livestock populations you can just cull all the infected animals and stop the enhanced disease from spreading. That’s not an option we have in human populations. So maybe we can learn something from listening to veterinarians.
This would ultimately result in a tsunami of hospitalizations and deaths in highly vaccinated populations whereas the unvaccinated would be better and better protected against the Newco variants thanks to their ‘enhanced’ (i.e., trained) innate immunity and because of reduced infectiousness and trans infectiousness of the virus in the upper and lower respiratory tract, respectively.
To translate:
Those who have submitted to being vaccinated, will keep getting infected over and over with new variants and risk a higher rate of hospitalization and/or death from the virus.
Those who did not get vaccinated will have a far better success rate in combating the virus, due to natural immune system kicking in and that immune system not having been corrupted by the "vaccines".
I think this is already occurring, to a degree. He predicts it will increase in size & scope.
Marek’s disease is pretty good animal science about the pitfalls of mass vaxx of a species with leaky vaccine in the midst of a pandemic.
Don’t shoot the messenger as he warns about ADE in humans that make the same mistake.
Lab created .
@ post 27 - Great comment.
According to an article by Sheryl Atkisson, a research group claims Omicron was also made in a lab. Apparently “They” can turn a pandemic off & on at will.
How is it for people who get their vaccines from veterinarians? The head of Phizer is a vet.
bkmk
Just FYI, veterinarians are THE expert epidemiologists. The human herd is no different in the manner and processes that contribute to epidemics than any other herd/flock animal.
Remember: 1) Veterinarians must master the biology, pathology and physiology of multiple species
2) In the military, a veterinarian is often the designated medic/corpsman in their particular unit.
It is more difficult to gain entry to vet school than to med school and from what I’ve read/heard, it is more difficult to graduate from vet school than from med school.Pre-vet and pre-med are the same curriculum.
I have learned more about wound care and supportive medical procedures for humans from vets than was ever offered from a human medical doctor. ER RNs are on the same level, especially the ones with military backgrounds.
IIRC, Bossche held a high, if not the highest, position in the European equivalent of our CDC.
You may think of vets are young women who work for a corporate practice of small animal medicine, but they must also be capable of caring for very valuable horses and both breed and production cattle. Even the smallest country vet does surgery routinely, which is not true of a medical doctor.
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