RideForever wrote: “Interesting that you use statistics from 1974 going forward, when it’s been recent revelations that have left our kids with nearly 50% of all kids showing signs of autism; particularly CoVID.”
The claim that nearly 50% of all kids show signs of autism is incorrect; current data shows the prevalence is significantly lower, with recent estimates from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) indicating 1 in 36 children have been diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). While autism rates are increasing, the 50% figure is inaccurate and may stem from a misunderstanding of autism traits versus a formal diagnosis.
Accurate statistics: The most recent data from the CDC shows that 1 in 36 children in the U.S. have been diagnosed with ASD. This is a substantial increase from previous years, but still far from 50%.
RideForever wrote: “Speaking of kids, none of the embryos of CoVID genetic treatment in the Pfizer study survived. Now they want all inoculations to use and spread the tech, despite the death toll. These are no longer vaccinations, they are genetic treatments.”
The claim that “none of the embryos” in the Pfizer COVID vaccine study survived is false and a widely debunked myth.
Multiple studies, including preclinical animal studies conducted by Pfizer, as well as human studies involving women undergoing in vitro fertilization (IVF), have found no evidence that the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine negatively affects fertility, embryo development, or
pregnancy outcomes.
Summary of the facts:
-Preclinical Studies: Before human trials were conducted in women of childbearing potential, Pfizer completed a developmental and reproductive toxicity (DART) study in animals, which showed no evidence of fertility or reproductive toxicity.
- Human Studies (IVF): Several studies involving patients undergoing IVF treatments have compared outcomes between vaccinated and unvaccinated women, finding no significant differences in egg retrieval rates, fertilization rates, embryo quality, implantation rates, pregnancy rates, or early pregnancy loss rates.
-Misinformation Source: The false claim originated from a misinterpretation of a Pfizer document containing passively collected adverse event reports during the early vaccine rollout. An analysis of a small subset of the data from this registry used a flawed calculation to misleadingly suggest a high rate of fetal loss. This calculation was widely debunked by experts and fact-checking organizations.
-No Fetal Tissue in Vaccine: The Pfizer vaccine does not contain any fetal cells or tissue. Fetal cell lines (cells grown in a laboratory from tissue collected decades ago) were used for testing purposes during research and development to confirm the vaccine produced the desired antibodies, a common practice in medical research.
Scientific evidence and data from numerous studies confirm the safety of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines for those trying to conceive or who are pregnant
RideForever wrote: “”These are no longer vaccinations, they are genetic treatments.”
Vaccinations are not considered genetic treatments or gene therapy. While some modern vaccines, like the COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, use genetic material (mRNA or DNA), they do not alter or interact with a person’s fundamental genetic makeup (DNA).
Where to start? The mXXX 'vaccines' cause a person to create a protein spike, and inserts that instruction in a cell's nucleus, thereby incorporating its reproduction when the DNA strand it has been added to is reproduced. There's no 'off' switch. You weren't born with the instructions to make the protein, you acquired them by a shot. It's certainly not the DNA you were born with.