Jon Rappoport

Jon Rappoport

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Jon Rappoport
Jon Rappoport
The vaccine fallacy almost no one mentions

The vaccine fallacy almost no one mentions

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Jon Rappoport
Oct 30, 2023
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Jon Rappoport
Jon Rappoport
The vaccine fallacy almost no one mentions
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THE fallacy stems from the fact that the viruses vaccines are supposed to protect against don’t exist. The viruses are fairy tales.

I’ve spent much time proving this over the years.

But for the purposes of this discussion ONLY, let’s assume the viruses do exist and do cause disease.

What is vaccination? It’s a rehearsal.

Some fragment or piece of a virus, embedded in the vaccine, will provoke the immune system to mount a defense. Specifically, front line scouts called antibodies will appear.

But the question is, since the rehearsal is successful, why is it necessary at all? We would expect the same positive result (with no rehearsal) when the real thing, the full virus, showed up in real life.

The rehearsal proves the body’s defense system was and is already prepared for the real thing.

This stunner puts the entire vaccine empire teetering on the edge of a cliff.

So the experts have a canned response.

They say the rehearsal is an “enhanced event.” It produces an extra-special magnified reaction from the antibodies, because something has been added to vaccines:

An adjuvant.

Often an aluminum compound, the adjuvant multiplies the antibody response, beyond what it ordinarily would be.

Thus, the rehearsal trains the immune system to mount a magnified attack against the virus when it really comes along, at a later time.

There is, however, a fatal flaw in this argument.

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