Hi Frens,
My husband and I are expecting our first baby in September. We are trying to figure out what to do about the "normal" vaccines for our baby. Neither my husband nor I are getting the experimental jab but we got all the regular vaccinations as kids.
We aren't sure if it's the right choice to vaccinate our child though. Q post 1010 mentions vaccines (not all) in a list of ways the cabal controls the population. Plus, we've both become really vaccine skeptical after seeing how nonsensical the covid "vaccine" is. On the other hand, my husband is terrified his crazy liberal in-laws will use not vaxxing as an excuse to try to legally get control of our kids.
If any of you know of any good resources/advice to help us make this decision, we'd really appreciate it. Maybe some vaccines are OK and others aren't? Any insights would be extremely appreciated.
The other thing we're trying to figure out is the RhoGAM shot. I'm O negative and my husband is A positive. So the baby might be Rh positive. Apparently if our blood comes into contact I may develop antibodies against the Rh factor and my body would attack future Rh positive babies. The midwife is recommending a RhoGAM shot. Apparently this is sourced from plasma donors. Does anyone know what the risk for that is with so many people having gotten the jab?
Thank you my frens.
Get the RhoGam shot if you want future babies!!! If you develop a reaction against his blood antigens, which is what the A, B, and + are, the baby suffers. You have two antigens you might become sensitive to. My mother had a reaction against B and only miscarried after that. Even sadder is to have a baby that looks like a lemon because of liver damage, something that happened weekly in the hospital where I worked as an aide just after high school. This was years before RhoGam was available.
Thank you so much for sharing this my fren. We were leaning towards the RhoGAM but you have convinced us to get it. We were worried there might be a risk of the Covid vaccine contaminating the plasma but it sounds worth it even if there is.
No, it's like a very transient protection against developing an allergy due to exposure to the antigen during the birth process.