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What a Difference a Day Makes

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The Pfizer vackseen has received full approval from the FDA.  Yippee.  Now I guess I should run right out and roll up my sleeve.

Nope.

I said before, in order to convince me to be vacksinated, you’ll need to convince me that the drugs are safe, effective and necessary.  I’m still waiting.

From my point of view nothing has changed.  Well, that’s not entirely true.  What has changed is that I’m going to have to stop calling it an experimental drug.  But that’s the only thing that has changed.  Don’t get me wrong.  It’s still an experimental drug.  I just can’t call it that anymore.

Having FDA approval isn’t going to change my mind about getting vacksinated.  Because that wasn’t what I was waiting for.  FDA approval doesn’t make the drug any safer.  The risk of taking the Pfizer drug is exactly the same today with FDA approval as it was yesterday without FDA approval. 

Approval by the FDA doesn’t make the thousands of deaths caused by Pfizer’s drug any less relevant.  Nor does it make the more than 200,000 reported instances of adverse reactions caused by just Pfizer’s drug, in the U.S. alone, to be any less relevant.  And, since the numbers are suspected to be grossly underreported, the actual number of deaths and illnesses caused by the Pfizer vackseen could be 10 times that.

Whatever the number of deaths and illnesses caused by Pfizer’s vackseen, they’re all relevant.  And I want to see some explanations. 

It’s not like I’ve been waiting for a government agency to tell me that it’s OK to get vacksinated.  I’ve had the CDC, which is also a government agency, telling me that for months.  I didn’t listen to them either.   

Even the “president” has been saying that the drugs are safe.  At least I think that’s what he’s been saying.  It’s hard to tell sometimes.  I forget the exact words he used.  I’m remembering it was something like, “if you don’t get vacksinated, you ain’t black”.  But I might be confusing that with something else.

The problem has never been that the government hasn’t told me that the drug is safe.  The problem is that they haven’t proven that it is safe.

All of the side effects listed in the Emergency Use Authorization still exist.  There’s still a risk of heart problems, brain fog, blood clots, paralysis and death.  And while not all of these things have been officially recognized as side effects from the drug, I lot of people have been reporting them. 

But there hasn’t been a serious investigation into the hundreds of thousands of claims.  The response to the data has been to say, “the drug couldn’t possibly be causing that”.  Well, something’s causing people to get sick and drop dead.  Maybe we should try to figure out what.

Unless the FDA has a time machine, they have no way of knowing what the long-term affects of the drug will be.  Even if they had a time machine they couldn’t know.  The one long-term study they had going was destroyed when the double blind was broken and people in the placebo group were allowed to be vacksinated.  Now there’s no comparison group left for any ongoing study.

Having FDA approval doesn’t make the drug any more necessary.

The FDA also approved the PCR test as a way to diagnose COVID-19.  Yet the inventor of the PCR test tells us it should never be used for diagnostic purposes.  So, FDA approval isn’t as valuable as you might think.

We know that “COVID deaths” have been wildly overreported.  Even the CDC agrees with that.  And now “COVID cases” are being counted differently for vacksinated people as they are for unvasksinated people.  There is no valid data that indicates that mass vacksination is even necessary.  There wasn’t any yesterday, and there isn’t any today.

FDA approval doesn’t make the drug any more effective.

The SARS-CoV-2 virus has mutated since the vackseen was developed.  Studies have shown that the vackseen is less effective against the “Delta” variant.  So, now people are being injected with a “booster” shot that is exactly the same as the previous shots.  I haven’t quite figured out how giving someone more of something that doesn’t seem to work is supposed to be helpful.

So, why would anyone think FDA approval should make any difference?

Running out and getting vacksinated the day after the FDA approves the vackseen makes as much sense as putting lockdowns in place the day after Lollapalooza.  Don’t like that example?  Here’s another one.  It makes as much sense as believing that hundreds of thousands of people gathering in Chicago isn’t a “super spreader event”, but hundreds of thousands of people gathering in Sturgis is.

The fact is, vacksinated people still get sick.  They’re still contagious and they still die.  They still have to wear masks they still have to social distance.  And…they still have to be vacksinated…again.


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Mike is just an average guy with a lot of opinions. He's a big fan of facts, logic and reason and uses them to try to make sense of the things he sees. His pronoun preference is flerp/flop/floop.