This is a Steve Kirsch 4 part post on X concerning vaccines in pets:
I got this message from a fellow MIT alum just now. The tl;dr is that vaccines are NOT safe to give to pets.
Hey, on an entirely different note, I thought I might tell you about our Veterinarian, who has a lot of information on Vaccines. Because of his and my stance on vax in general, we decided to go have dinner together back in 2021. I learned a lot from him at the time because veterinary medicine is not nearly as "bought" by big pharma and MSM as human medicine -- remember, almost everyone pays themselves, no insurance, there is less money involved, and the doctor circuit is much tighter and they share notes: No HIPAA issues. Here are a few of the things I learned:
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He is legally obligated to give rabies vaccines. However, most vets don't know that you can test dogs for the rabies antigens from last year's vax, and if they have the antigens, he can write down that the titer is high, and he can wait another year.
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vets have discovered that vaxed dogs are much more likely to get cancer in the area vaxxed, usually the shoulder. He now (and for years) gives the vax in the tail of the dog -- that way, if cancer develops, the tail can be amputated without issues, vs the shoulder which is problematic.
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There are many other vaxes for dogs, with similar impacts. He avoids them unless insisted upon by the owner, and if so, goes in the tail.
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this has been known for YEARS. It's not new. It's been covered up like everything else. But, check this article out regarding a study at Purdue University where they SHOWED and PROVED issues by studying vaxxed vs un-vaxxed dogs:
https://www.dogsnaturallymagazine.com/purdue-vaccination-studies/
Injection site, previously on the neck, were getting too many tumors, so they switched it to the hind quarters. Take note, when you pet your, or a friend's, old dog how often they have benign fatty tumors on the rear end now.
Our 19 1/2 year old chihuahua had 2 of these fatty tumors removed and they came back.
Them chihuahuas go the distance, don't they? My buddy just lost his at, I think, twenty-one. I wish yours many healthy years to come. Dogs are so very special.