April 19, 2023

If there is anyone who still thinks there isn’t a political element to the overwhelming thrust to keep the mRNA jabs coming, consider this:

‘); googletag.cmd.push(function () { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1609268089992-0’); }); }

A new study reported on the website for the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP) finds that “many younger U.S. women say flu and COVID vaccines are not safe in pregnancy.”  The first thing we notice is that the report nonchalantly groups the flu vaccine in with the COVID jab.  Linking these two is obvious propaganda to force an association between an actual vaccine and the mRNA jab, with the hope of convincing the public that there is no difference between them.   

The study begins by telling us that 17% of women of child-bearing age do not believe the flu vaccine is safe for women and their fetuses during pregnancy.  However, “skepticism was even more evident in the COVID-19 vaccine findings” with 31% saying the jab is not safe.

They go on to report that the results depend on vaccination status:  The unvaccinated are more likely to believe a flu vaccine or COVID jab are unsafe, and the vaccinated are more likely to think they’re safe.  Apparently, they needed a study to figure that out.

‘); googletag.cmd.push(function () { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1609270365559-0’); }); }

But it doesn’t end there.  The lead author of the report probably plans to use the data to support a new public health push that hasn’t been revealed yet:

In the report, lead author Kathleen Hall Jamieson, PhD, called the results worrisome.  “Because the Covid and flu vaccines help protect both those who are pregnant and their infants, dispatching misconceptions about them should be a public health priority,” she said.

How these folks and their misconceptions are going to be dispatched is not specifically outlined.

The study goes on to tell us a few more things about the respondents:

  • Older adults and those with more education were more likely to have been vaccinated.
  • 47% of respondents “aren’t sure” whether the COVID infection carries a higher myocarditis risk than the jab. (Isn’t that a trick question?)
  • 55% suspect that the CDC is covering up side effects and deaths associated with the jab, or are “unsure” if they are reporting them accurately.  (A huge finding that was glossed over.)

Then we navigate to an even more befuddling part of the study which states that:

Among all respondents, 42% said a family member has been diagnosed as having a mental illness, while 24% said they themselves have such a diagnosis, and 59% indicated that they know someone with a mental illness.