From Alex Berenson:
The piece’s headline was “How a Pandemic Malaise Is Shaping American Politics.” Its thesis was that although no one talks about Covid anymore, everyone is still furious:
Public confidence in institutions — the presidency, public schools, the criminal justice system, the news media, Congress — slumped in surveys in the aftermath of the pandemic and has yet to recover. The pandemic hardened voter distrust in government…
The article went on to list the reasons people are angry: how school closures hurt kids and lockdowns hurt cities, the stress families endured, how differing views on shutdowns exacerbated tensions between Democrats and Republicans.
Yet the piece never mentioned the most truly corrosive factor, even as three little words deep in the piece gave the game away:
[Dr. Mary Elizabeth Christian’s] parents, who were vaccinated, broke their isolation for a dinner to celebrate their 62nd wedding anniversary in July 2021. Within three days, they both tested positive. They died within two days of each other that August.
Dr. Christian’s parents were vaccinated. They got Covid and died anyway.
Because the mRNAs failed.
At best, the two-shot regimen provided a few months of protection in 2021 against the original variant of Covid (ignoring the fact the first shot temporarily increased the risk of infection).
The first booster added, perhaps, a few weeks of protection.
Everything since has been useless, the drug version of the mask mandates and lockdowns and test-and-trace public health theater that made 2020 unbearable. At a high price, too. The mRNAs seriously injured or killed many people who received them. How many? I don’t know, and I won’t guess, but the number is not trivial. They caused many more people to suffer for days or weeks with severe side effects.
And they do not work.
They do not provide lasting protection. Across the mRNA countries, the biggest Covid wave came when Omicron hit in early 2022, long after most adults were jabbed.
By 2023, Omicron had infected nearly everyone, vaccinated or not. It made Covid endemic, a contagious but relatively mild infection most of us will get several times.
Omicron’s relative lack of virulence did the world - and the vaccine fanatics - a great favor. As overall Covid deaths dropped, vaccinators argued the mRNAs helped against serious disease even after they failed against infection. That theory is almost certainly untrue, and the studies that show it are hopelessly tainted by a statistical artifact called “healthy vaccine user bias.”
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