Childhood vaccination has been one of Ms. Spicer’s pet projects since at least 2011. Ironically she was also appointed “Aspect Ambassador” for Autism Spectrum Australia in 2015.
Today, according to her website, she is a speech trainer, writer and does speaking engagements.
But her life has been very different since the New Year.
It’s unclear when Ms. Spicer received her first injection. But the second one came on June 28, according to her Twitter posts.
Her vaxx on camera caption reads, “it is important for us to stand together against anti-vaxxers.”
She received her booster shot “as soon as they would allow,” on December 22, 2021.
One week later, she was sick. She tested positive for so-called COVID-19 on January 2.
“I’m still sick as a dog,” she wrote on January 6. “But I’m grateful that being vaccinated means I’m less likely to go to the hospital.”
Ms. Spicer blames her illness on the booster not “kicking in” fast enough. Ms. Spicer was still sick two months later. But she continued praising the holy vaxx.
“You are much more likely to develop heart problems after contracting the COVID-19 virus than you are from the vaccines,” she tweeted on March 10.
A March 18 Instagram post said she suffers from “debilitating fatigue and heart problems.”
She now blamed “long COVID” and repeated that her issues arose from receiving the booster too late. “Stay up-to-date with your vaccinations,” she wrote.
Of course, "Long COVID" could simply be what people have called Vaccine-induced Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome", or VAIDS.
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