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GreatAwakening
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Reason: None provided.

the responses here demonstrate the critical issue you raise. we can't run a fear campaign. the vaxxed can't be told they were injected with poison, etc. the first step is to break the programming that vaccines are the cure.

everyone I know is vaxxed. here's the approach I take when they bring it up:

  1. we've learned a lot in the last year and a half of this pandemic. we're learning how much protection the vaccine is giving. we also now have a number of peer-reviewed studies and proven therapeutic protocols (like monoclonal antibodies and others) that quickly clear the virus, prevent hospitalization and death.

  2. my concern is that the vaccinated might stop taking precautions - there's enough data showing "breakthrough cases" that, as the CDC says, just because you're vaccinated doesn't mean you can't catch covid or pass it on to others.

  3. yes, the reason for the vaccine is that if you do catch Covid, it's believed your symptoms will be less severe and you'll recover faster. but with Delta, new "variants" are proving resistant to the vaccine. but we're not yet sure it's a new variant with a unique genome sequence. the inventor of the mRNA vaccine, Dr. Malone, says it could be we're seeing instead a thing called ADE (Antibody Dependent Enhancement) - a syndrome that can happen in these types of vaccines; pharmaceutical companies have published a lot about ADE.

  4. what it means for you, if you've been vaccinated, is that your immune system is primed to fight Covid, but in ADE it might work too well -- go into overdrive. that hyperimmune response can look the same as Covid. it just means you should be careful if you start to feel sick, don't just blow it off thinking you're protected, but call your doctor right away, just in case you're one of those with an exaggerated immune response, potentially showing signs of ADE.

  5. and if you do get sick with ADE, or have breakthrough case, or a new variant is confirmed, know that these new therapeutic protocols can treat you and you will recover. but these therapies are best started early, when symptoms are mild.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

the responses here demonstrate the critical issue you raise. we can't run a fear campaign. the vaxxed can't be told they were injected with poison, etc. the first step is to break the programming that vaccines are the cure.

everyone I know is vaxxed. here's the approach I take when they bring it up:• we've learned a lot in the last year and a half of this pandemic. we're learning how much protection the vaccine is giving. we also now have a number of peer-reviewed studies and proven therapeutic protocols (like monoclonal antibodies and others) that quickly clear the virus, prevent hospitalization and death.

• my concern is that the vaccinated might stop taking precautions - there's enough data showing "breakthrough cases" that, as the CDC says, just because you're vaccinated doesn't mean you can't catch covid or pass it on to others.

• yes, the reason for the vaccine is that if you do catch Covid, it's believed your symptoms will be less severe and you'll recover faster. but with Delta, new "variants" are proving resistant to the vaccine. but we're not yet sure it's a new variant with a unique genome sequence. the inventor of the mRNA vaccine, Dr. Malone, says it could be we're seeing instead a thing called ADE (Antibody Dependent Enhancement) - a syndrome that can happen in these types of vaccines; pharmaceutical companies have published a lot about ADE.

• what it means for you, if you've been vaccinated, is that your immune system is primed to fight Covid, but in ADE it might work too well -- go into overdrive. that hyperimmune response can look the same as Covid. it just means you should be careful if you start to feel sick, don't just blow it off thinking you're protected, but call your doctor right away, just in case you're one of those with an exaggerated immune response, potentially showing signs of ADE.

• and if you do get sick with ADE, or have breakthrough case, or a new variant is confirmed, know that these new therapeutic protocols can treat you and you will recover. but these therapies are best started early, when symptoms are mild.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

the responses here demonstrate the critical issue you raise. we can't run a fear campaign. the vaxxed can't be told they were injected with poison, etc. the first step is to break the programming that vaccines are the cure.

everyone I know is vaxxed. here's the approach I take when they bring it up:

  1. we've learned a lot in the last year and a half of this pandemic. we're learning how much protection the vaccine is giving. we also now have a number of peer-reviewed studies and proven therapeutic protocols (like monoclonal antibodies and others) that quickly clear the virus, prevent hospitalization and death.

  2. my concern is that the vaccinated might stop taking precautions - there's enough data showing "breakthrough cases" that, as the CDC says, just because you're vaccinated doesn't mean you can't catch covid or pass it on to others.

  3. yes, the reason for the vaccine is that if you do catch Covid, it's believed your symptoms will be less severe and you'll recover faster. but with Delta, new "variants" are proving resistant to the vaccine. but we're not yet sure it's a new variant with a unique genome sequence. the inventor of the mRNA vaccine, Dr. Malone, says it could be we're seeing instead a thing called ADE (Antibody Dependent Enhancement) - a syndrome that can happen in these types of vaccines; pharmaceutical companies have published a lot about ADE.

  4. what it means for you, if you've been vaccinated, is that your immune system is primed to fight Covid, but in ADE it might work too well -- go into overdrive. that hyperimmune response can look the same as Covid. it just means you should be careful if you start to feel sick, don't just blow it off thinking you're protected, but call your doctor right away, just in case you're one of those with an exaggerated immune response, potentially showing signs of ADE.

  5. and if you do get sick with ADE, or have breakthrough case, or a new variant is confirmed, know that these new therapeutic protocols can treat you and you will recover. but these therapies are best started early, when symptoms are mild.

3 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

the responses here demonstrate the critical issue you raise. we can't run a fear campaign. the vaxxed can't be told they were injected with poison, etc. the first step is to break the programming that vaccines are the cure.

everyone I know is vaxxed. here's the approach I take when they bring it up:

  1. we've learned a lot in the last year and a half of this pandemic. we're learning how much protection the vaccine is giving. we also now have a number of peer-reviewed studies and proven therapeutic protocols (like monoclonal antibodies and others) that quickly clear the virus, prevent hospitalization and death.

  2. my concern is that the vaccinated might stop taking precautions - there's enough data showing "breakthrough cases" that, as the CDC says, just because you're vaccinated doesn't mean you can't catch covid or pass it on to others.

  3. yes, the reason for the vaccine is that if you do catch Covid, it's believed your symptoms will be less severe and you'll recover faster. but with Delta, new "variants" are proving resistant to the vaccine. but we're not yet sure it's a new variant with a unique genome sequence. the inventor of the mRNA vaccine, Dr. Malone, says it could be we're seeing instead a thing called ADE (Antibody Dependent Enhancement) - a syndrome that can happen in these types of vaccines; pharmaceutical companies have published a lot about ADE.

  4. what it means for you, if you've been vaccinated, is that your immune system is primed to fight Covid, but in ADE it might work too well -- go into overdrive. that hyperimmune response can look the same as Covid. it just means you should be careful if you start to feel sick, don't just blow it off thinking you're protected, but call your doctor right away, just in case you're one of those with an exaggerated immune response, potentially showing signs of ADE.

  5. and if you do get sick with ADE, or have breakthrough case, or a new variant is confirmed, know that these new therapeutic protocols can treat you and you will recover. but these therapies are best started early, when symptoms are mild.

3 years ago
1 score