I’m thinking vaxxitis.
He was against Putin. an umbrella incident?
And THAT is why I don’t eat cooked cabbage!
Not at all related to experimental injections...../s
Vaxxed and boostered?
“It’s a treatment. Not a preventative!”
...acting as Security Council Facilitator on the Iran nuclear deal...
Oh, boy...
Vaccine snakes. (A Saint Patrick’s reference)
So I don't feel the slightest sadness in hearing this news.
Kinda cool to die on St. Patrick’s day. Shouldn’t have got the shot.
It’s gotten so bad, there are people dyin’ now that never died before.
Vaxx?
Not the Buffalo Bills.
5.56mm
This is not a vaccine. The jab using mRNA delivers mRNA in a nano lipid or fat envelope to a cell. It’s a medical device designed to stimulate a cell into becoming a pathogen creator by creating the known to be harmful spike protein.
Vaccine is a defined term in law and under CDC and FDA standards (conveniently changed late 2021). A vaccine has to stimulate an immunity in the person receiving it. And it must also disrupt transmission.
That’s not what this is. Even the drug manufacturers admit the jab or its mRNA does not stop transmission. The jab is a treatment, but if it’s discussed as a treatment it would not get the sympathetic ear of public health officials because people would ask what other treatments there are.
And alternative treatments would hamper FDA’s ability to issue emergency approval of the jabs. Defining the narrative with the term vaccine is a sucker punch to open and free discourse. “Vaccine” throws the discussion into one of pro/con vaccine.
The jab is a mechanical device in the form of a very small packet of technology inserted into the human system to activate the cell to become a pathogenetic spike protein manufacturing site. No basis exists to stipulate this is a vaccine.
Simply put, this is a chemical pathogen device meant to unleash chemical pathogen production within a cell. It’s a medical device, not a drug. The jab is not a living or biologic system, but rather a physical technology that just happens to come in the size of a molecular package.