February: 'Everybody, go get your shot”
Speaking at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), Trump said, “We took care of a lot of people — including, I guess, on December 21st, we took care of Joe Biden, because he got his shot, he got his vaccine. … It shows you how unpainful that vaccine shot is.”
Trump added: “So everybody, go get your shot.”
March: ‘I would recommend it to’ my vaccine-skeptic allies
In a Fox News interview, Trump said, “I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it and a lot of those people voted for me, frankly.” He also repudiated claims that the vaccines aren’t safe: “It’s a great vaccine, it’s a safe vaccine, and it’s something that works.”
Mid-April: Defended safety of Johnson & Johnson vaccine
After the federal government paused its authorization of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, in light of rare blood-clotting issue which vaccine skeptics seized upon, Trump excoriated the decision and pointed to the minimal adverse effects.
“The federal pause on the J&J shot makes no sense,” Trump said, adding: “Just six people out of the nearly 7 million who’ve gotten the Johnson & Johnson vaccine reported blood clots.”
Trump even suggested that the move would feed the kind of anti-vaccine skepticism that was on the rise in his base. (Allies such as Tucker Carlson have often pointed to unverified reports in the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, or VAERS.) “Indeed, this moronic move is a gift to the anti-vax movement,” Trump said. “The science bureaucrats are fueling that deranged pseudoscience.”
Late April: ‘The vaccine is a great thing, and people should take advantage of it’
Trump told the New York Post: “I’m all in favor of the vaccine. It’s one of the great achievements, a true miracle, and not only for the United States. We’re saving tens of millions of lives throughout the world. We’re saving entire countries.”
Trump added that, “The vaccine is a great thing, and people should take advantage of it,” while adding that it shouldn’t be mandated.
July: ‘I recommend you take it’
At a rally in Arizona, Trump said, “I recommend you take it, but I also believe in your freedoms 100 percent.”
Mid-August: ‘Once you get the vaccine, you get better’
In the same interview in which Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo ultimately goaded Trump into initially questioning the boosters, Trump began by offering one of his most forceful pro-vaccine statements.
“Now one thing: When you have the vaccine, people that do [get infected] — and it’s a very small number relatively, but people that do get it — get better much quicker,” Trump said. “And it’s very important to know. They don’t get nearly as sick, and they get better. [Sen.] Lindsey Graham is an example. He said, if I didn’t have this vaccine, I would have died.” Story continues below advertisement
“So once you get the vaccine, you get better,” Trump added.
Late August: ‘Take the vaccines. … It is working.’
At a rally in Alabama shortly after the Bartiromo interview, Trump again broadly promoted vaccines — even playing off those who booed him for it.
“I recommend take the vaccines,” he said. “It’s good. I did it. Take the vaccines.”
As some in the crowd jeered, Trump took care to qualify his remarks by noting that this is about personal choice. But then he re-upped the message. “You got — no, that’s okay. That’s all right. You got your freedoms. But I happened to take the vaccine,” Trump said, before defusing the situation with a joke: “If it doesn’t work, you’ll be the first to know.”
He added: “But it is working.”
September: ‘The vaccines do work. … It’s tremendously successful.'
“The vaccines do work,” Trump said on a conservative talk-radio show. “And they are effective. So here’s my thing: I think I saved millions and millions of lives around the world.”
He added: “And now countries are using our vaccines, and it’s tremendous. It’s tremendously successful.”
December: Don’t let the libs win when you promote vaccine skepticism
At an event with former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly in Dallas, Trump disclosed that he got a booster shot after all. He did so despite his August comments about a Big Pharma money-grab and despite having told the Wall Street Journal in September that he probably wouldn’t get it. (“I feel like I’m in good shape from that standpoint; I probably won’t. … I’m not against it, but it’s probably not for me.”) Story continues below advertisement
And despite again being jeered for his vaccine promotion, Trump said that it was a small portion of the audience. He also said — as he had before — that feeding vaccine skepticism was counterproductive.
“What we’ve done is historic,” he said. “Don’t let them take away — don’t take it away from ourselves. You’re playing right into their hands when you sort of like, ‘Oh, the vaccine.’ ”
We shall see if his supporters heed his advice — or keep playing into the left’s hands.
Can you explain Sudden Adult Death Syndrome?
A nonsense medical term that sounds scary in order to produce an emotional response that is also intentionally vague about the specific underlying causes. Emotional manipulation keeps you in a state of mind where you stop thinking logically, like the people that downvote a question that makes them start logically thinking about if they are still being emotionally manipulated.
I get it.
ps: See also: SIDS.
So are you saying the vax is not killing people or are you trying to make a different point?
I'm asking for proof of the parent claim in order to honestly answer the question posed, using socratic method to get people thinking for themselves and also pointing out the inherent dishonesty in the question itself. I haven't seen any due diligence presented by anyone as far as research goes beyond parroting the current narratives and offering anecdotal evidence.
And people wonder why things are taking so long? Maybe it's them, maybe it's me.
I agree that people are dragging their feet when it comes to reaching the truth. But not in the way you seem to suggest.
For example: You haven't explained the need for the enemy to come up with SADS out of the blue. What else could people be randomly dying from if not the vax? Is this not logical thinking?
It might help to understand that ALL vaccines are poison because they are "intended" to protect you from something that doesn't exist.
https://www.fluoridefreepeel.ca/fois-reveal-that-health-science-institutions-have-no-record-of-any-virus-having-been-isolated-purified-virology-isnt-a-science/
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Credit to u/MaxJenius :
Hmmm lets see here. Lets start with ALL of this evidence that pathogenic viruses dont exist.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/dX0wqs2xbM05/
https://www.bitchute.com/video/8qJwUaLxG8Ll/
Covid-19 myths part 1 https://www.bitchute.com/video/Vl71rgRiv13h/
Rosenau Experiment https://zenodo.org/record/1505669/files/article.pdf
Rosenau experiments (extra information) https://archive.md/jvb0l
High Impact Flix: Contagions don’t exist https://odysee.com/@HighImpactFlix:c/oct-19-contagion:1
https://www.bitchute.com/video/T7clboYMkS7I/
https://www.bitchute.com/video/BFnIM5KxelmR/
https://www.bitchute.com/video/EdffVJbFxb96/
Bechamp or Pasteur A lost chapter in the history of Biology http://mnwelldir.org/docs/history/biographies/Bechamp-or-Pasteur.pdf
Tom Cowan speech, july 10, 2021 https://odysee.com/@dharmabear:2/%E2%81%A3Dr-Thomas-Cowan-Viral-Panopticon-Part-1-July-10-21:3
Flexner Report
https://archive.org/details/carnegieflexnerreport