They approved an application for a biological agent named comirnaty that is not available in the United States and extended the EUA for the Pfizer death shot.
They then went around and gaslite everyone into thinking it had been approved..
And, as soon as 1 therapeutic (jab, pill, whatever) gets full FDA approval, the EUAs for the other (experimental) jabs will expire because they are all predicated on there being no available FDA approved therapeutic.
(So, it's kinda like they're "all in it together".)
The reason the gave approval to Comirnaty, is that if they approved the Phizer jab, that would mean the J&J, and Moderna jab would have lost EUA status.
Rules says for EUA, no other approved, and available product can be avaliable.
Not approved. EUA extended and the "approved" Camirnity (sp?) isn't even in the U.S. nor can you get it. They did a shell game to see if people would bite.
Forgive video title. imbedded is discussion on a nih press release. You can find it from there. I checked it out. You can find the info on fda and cdc websites.
One source I saw said Comirnaty would be available by the end of October and another indicated next year. I am inclined to think sooner rather than later as an approved version that is available would make legally challenging the vaccine (for this issue) more difficult. Like the EUA versions, this approved version did not follow standard scientific practice. The FDA process typically takes anywhere between 5 and 10 years.
It has not been approved…
They approved an application for a biological agent named comirnaty that is not available in the United States and extended the EUA for the Pfizer death shot.
They then went around and gaslite everyone into thinking it had been approved..
This is the letter that was sent out by the FDA.
It says everything you need to know..
https://www.fda.gov/media/150386/download?fbclid=IwAR2Mqtx5VfLsuEl5GwQtTjpVCiW0YaWKz_c7ISvY9wneOjmX7ItEKTWlocw
Thanks fran
And, as soon as 1 therapeutic (jab, pill, whatever) gets full FDA approval, the EUAs for the other (experimental) jabs will expire because they are all predicated on there being no available FDA approved therapeutic.
(So, it's kinda like they're "all in it together".)
no clot shots have been approved.
Best article I've seen so far from common sense person.
https://djhjmedia.com/rich/pfizer-biontech-vaccine-is-still-under-eua-comirnaty-was-approved-but-will-not-be-available-for-some-time-causing-confusion/
The reason the gave approval to Comirnaty, is that if they approved the Phizer jab, that would mean the J&J, and Moderna jab would have lost EUA status.
Rules says for EUA, no other approved, and available product can be avaliable.
this is so confusing bc i literally read a fb fact checker article that sourced a link to fda saying biontech was approved. what a effin mess.
Not approved. EUA extended and the "approved" Camirnity (sp?) isn't even in the U.S. nor can you get it. They did a shell game to see if people would bite.
https://rumble.com/vnenav-feds-hunting-parents-that-speak-out-against-poisonous-abuse-of-kids.html
Forgive video title. imbedded is discussion on a nih press release. You can find it from there. I checked it out. You can find the info on fda and cdc websites.
CDC link
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/COVID-19-related-codes.html
One source I saw said Comirnaty would be available by the end of October and another indicated next year. I am inclined to think sooner rather than later as an approved version that is available would make legally challenging the vaccine (for this issue) more difficult. Like the EUA versions, this approved version did not follow standard scientific practice. The FDA process typically takes anywhere between 5 and 10 years.