Jarhyn
Wizard
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2010
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- Natural Philosophy, Game Theoretic Ethicist
Jesus fuck her reading comprehension is as bad as she accuses me of having, here.Most vaccines do not have specific symptoms, just the general flu-like from fighting the "infection".The problem here is that vaccines don't hurt anyone; at best they cause much more mold versions of what happens during a normal infection.
That's not actually true. Vaccines don't cause mild versions of the actual infection. Vaccines can cause generally "flu like" symptoms, and that's true for almost all vaccines, regardless of what symptoms the actual infection causes. Vaccines prompt the body to produce antibodies for the inactive virus strains included in the vaccine - and the production of antibodies causes inflammation and soreness, and often a slight fever over a short period of time. Tetanus vaccine doesn't cause any of the symptoms of tentanus, not even mild ones - it causes generally "flu like" symptoms. Same for diphtheria, and for rubella, and for shingles. Arguably, one could say that influenza vaccines cause mild flu symptoms, but that's largely because the symptoms from influenza are almost entirely a result of antibody production in the first place.
But we do sometimes see mild myocarditis from the Covid vaccine--which is a Covid symptom.
And dengue fever has the nasty effect of a subsequent infection being worse than the original--and the vaccine has exactly the same effect. Thus the vaccine is only given to those who have already had dengue fever.
Which is why the VICP exists.It's also not entirely true that vaccines don't hurt anyone. They don't hurt many people, but there are people who have allergic reactions to the vaccines pretty much across the board. Additionally, people with certain types of immune system conditions shouldn't take vaccines because it can cause severe reactions in them that can lead to serious injury or death. Vaccines in general come with warnings for certain types of allergies and immunocompromising conditions. Additionally, although it's rare, there have been some few vaccines in the past that have been associated with unexpected deleterious outcomes.
Just read the text, it's right there in the original quote: at best they cause much more
This isn't to say it's a full gamut of the results of a full infection, but the reaction the body has is necessarily similar when exposed to a spike protein as when exposed to a whole virus; the immune reaction is what causes the majority of symptoms. Until your body stops reacting to the spike protein, it acts as if there is an active infection.
The result is brief, and generally mild, but it is, in fact, at best for those claiming to be vaccine injured, for the most part, really just a much more mild version of what happens during an active infection, because it is caused by the body's reaction to part of the virus.
I can't see why she even bothered to argue this?
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