I had thought about it a lot and decided that it was probably worth the risk, based on conversations with medical researchers who really understand how it works.
Then yesterday we had a workplace webinar where the president said that all staff are required to get the vaccine. Someone said how can you possibly require a vaccine that isn't even approved, but is only under emergency use authorization. The general counsel piped up and said that we think we are within our legal rights to require you to get it.
Someone else pointed out that in order to get this experimental vaccine we have to sign away our liability rights, so if the vaccine injures or kills us we have no recourse. And so isn't the company then liable for forcing you to take that risk? The webinar went silent for about 40 seconds and then the general counsel said that she would "circle back" on that question. So now they are worried...
Going to wait this one out for a bit.
100% correct, the Experimental Gene therapy treatment causes ADE (antibody dependent enhancement) which gives you a "peanut allergy" to the lab manufactured protein string that they implant in your cells via the messenger rna . This Protein can react to ANY pathogen that has similarity such as the common cold. We have 8 common colds and 4 of them are fucking coronaviruses. They tested mrna coronavirus vaccines on ferrets in 2005 and 2008 and in those studies an acceptable number of ferrets had usual reactions and a couple deaths BUT many months later 30 percent of the ferrets died when they encountered natural viruses because of the enhanced immune response caused by the treatment. This shit has no business being used on people. When the people start dying this coming winter in droves they will 100% say its from a new more deadly chinaflu strain.
You dont happen to have any links for that ferret study do you? I am compiling a database of these studies and articles if/when my workplace tries to force this thing on us.
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/TPV3/Voices.php/2021/01/18/pathogenic-priming-for-a-cytokine-1
That article doesn't cite the study.