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- Embed this noticeYes, because it hasn’t been shown to be effective. I quote The Contagion Myth by Tom Cowan:
“Pasteur believed that he could prevent rabies by vaccinating thevictims of dog bites. He created the rabies vaccine by taking saliva, blood,and part of the brain or spinal cord (usually the cerebrospinal fluid) from asuspected animal and injecting it into a living rabbit, then aging and dryingthe cells from the rabbit’s spinal cord so that it could be injected into humanbeings.His first patient, a badly bitten nine-year-old boy, received the vaccine—after a doctor had cauterized the wound—and recovered. Pasteurproclaimed his success—but others were not so lucky. A Dr. Charles BellTaylor, writing in a publication called National Review in July 1890, listedmany cases in which Pasteur’s patients died, whereas the dogs that hadbitten them remained healthy”
Viruses have never been proven to exist as anything distinct from exosomes, which are part of normal cellular function.
No seriously, it is. There was even a study or two that showed that it does get converted into DNA. It probably is hereditary. Why wouldn’t it be?
SARS-COV-2 has never been proven to exist, and Covid has no symptoms at all that even remotely distinguish it from the usual seasonal flu.