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March 21st, 2021, 03:54 AM
#1
Vaccine Side affect greater if you've had the actual virus.
There is increasing numbers of people around the world who are becoming very sick after receiving the vaccine because they they already had the anti-bodies from the disease itself.
The Vaccine organizers refuse to take measures to test people for their natural immunity from having had the virus and their bodies have already created the 't' cells.
Dr. Erin Morcomb, a family medicine physician at the Mayo Clinic Health System in La Crosse, Wis., and head of its COVID-19 vaccination team, confirms that the reactions can vary based on your health history.
"What we've seen in studies is that the second dose does tend to have a little bit more potential to cause side effects than the first dose, but for people who have had COVID-19 infection previously and then recovered, they are at higher risk of having those same side effects after their first dose," she says.
The reason, she explains, is that those who developed the infection previously have an immune system that is already primed to fight it off. "After they've had their COVID-19 active infection, they've made some antibodies themselves in their body to the national infection," Morcomb says.
"Then when they get their first dose, their body is already recognizing that they have some antibodies and they can make a really robust immune response to that first dose of vaccine."
Robust response ?? It's killing elderly people faster that the the virus itself.
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/strong-rea...214925129.html
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March 21st, 2021 03:54 AM
# ADS
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March 21st, 2021, 06:55 AM
#2
It is called a cytokine storm and doctors have known and been warning about this for at least a year now.
The vaccine is "Priming" the body for a fight that is usually not necessary.
"The body's immune system is, at the moment, the most effective weapon people have against COVID-19. The majority of patients can cure themselves of the disease simply by resting at home — enabling a small army of their own cells to attack the infection. Those cells make it harder for the virus to replicate, and help to develop antibodies that prevent it from infecting new cells. Those antibodies also likely help provide some protection against reinfection by the COVID-19 virus further down the road."
"Exactly why or how COVID-19 would do the same remains unclear. But data out of China and Europe suggest that patients have elevated levels of cytokines and other immune molecules that are associated with these storms. It's possible that the cytokine storm is being triggered because the virus is continuing to replicate, despite the immune response, says Marion Pepper, an immunologist at the University of Washington."
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-...ht-be-to-blame