“Little to no protection”
The efficacy of a fourth dosage of the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 mRNA vaccines provided only modest protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection, according to researchers at Sheba Medical Center in Ramat Gan, Israel.
The injections from Pfizer are not a vaccination in the traditional sense. It's nothing more than pharmaceutical therapy at its most basic level. It's a more invasive, sophisticated, and experimental version of NyQuil at the end of the day - the concoction only addresses symptoms, not infection itself.
This is the second study now showing such results after the fourth jab:
“The interim results released show that the [fourth dose of the] vaccine offers little to no protection against contracting the virus when compared to young and healthy individuals vaccinated with three doses.”
Even for what the injection succeeds in shielding, it only does so at a 31-43% efficacy rate (Pfizer’s 4th jab is more effective than Moderna’s). In Major League Baseball, these numbers would be phenomenal; in the world of vaccines, these numbers are abysmally low.
Not only did the study find little efficacy, it also resulted in enormous adverse reactions from the jabs:
However, 25.2% of fourth dose recipients experienced moderate-to-severe local reactions and 6.5% had moderate-to-severe systemic reactions to the second booster.
In case you missed it, the list of “moderate-to-severe systemic reactions” is not small.
This study comes on the heels of calls from Pfizer and Moderna to make the vaccine available to children as young as six months old. Even the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is eager to approve the vaccine for infants. Given that the Pfizer vaccine was only 11% effective in children aged 5-11, parents are understandably concerned about the efficacy and safety of the yet-to-be-approved pharmaceutical drug.
If you’re looking for the silver bullet to COVID-19, it seems like the fourth jab from Pfizer or Moderna won’t be the answer. You’re better off buying a membership at Planet Fitness than venturing to your local CVS or urgent care center. At least a treadmill offers proven fitness results that will translate into tangible benefits.
Chart of the Day
A list of news stories that you may have missed from today:
Airline CEOs Call on Biden to Lift Mask Mandate, Covid-Test Requirement for Air Travel
CDC Unilaterally Altered Florida’s Covid Death-Count Data, State’s Department of Health Alleges
At-home COVID-19 tests can pose risks if used improperly, FDA warns
LA Marathon: Woman who collapsed at finish line dies at hospital
Moderna: Low-dose COVID-19 vaccine works in babies, toddlers, preschoolers
New research shows higher risk of developing diabetes after COVID infection
Alcohol-Related Deaths Soared During Pandemic, Outpaced COVID-19 For Adults Under 65, Study Says
The consequences of these injections may be extremely serious. An OpEd titled "Have we entered a self-sustaining modus operandi for COVID-19?" has been posted recently on Trial Site News (https://trialsitenews.com/have-we-entered-a-self-sustaining-modus-operandi-for-covid-19/#comments). It addresses potential consequences of COVID-19 "vaccinations" followed by repeated boosters. Because most of the critical infrastructure personnel in the USA (doctors, nurses, military, law enforcement, teachers, pilots, etc.) were required to receive the initial COVID-19 "vaccinations" in order to remain employed, and are being required to get the boosters to remain employed, the consequences for the USA could be catastrophic if the scenario posited in the OpEd comes to pass. Recent events suggest we have entered the initial phases of this scenario.
The article is Open Access, and may be distributed freely.
I wouldn't be surprised if they kept pushing boosters even when a variant comes along that is more virulent but equally immune to the "vaccines" like Omicron. Apparently, none of these folks will acknowledge the risks of ADE or OAS unless the deaths/side effects of being vaccinated become overwhelming.
Don't get me wrong, while covid is mild for most, it can be nasty for some, regardless of co-morbidities. It wasn't nice to me but I recovered fully (fit and otherwise healthy). Despite that, I do not regret avoiding one of these transfections. It is risk, for sure, calculable but not perfectly. However, while the "health" authorities love to point out the risks of getting covid, they openly downplay significant side effects of transfections and are seemingly oblivious to the broader risks that come with implementing widespread, novel, non-sterilizing vaccines in the midst of a pandemic (per GVB).