by Kyle Becker at The Wildfire Newsletter
The Covid-19 vaccine* debate has been predicated on a number of demonstrable untruths since the very beginning. No bigger lie has been told to the American public than the vaccines are “safe and effective.”
This ceaseless “safe and effective” mantra has been told to millions of Americans by white labcoat-wearing ‘public health’ officials in countless ad campaigns, as if a page torn out of the Milgram experiment.
Since the quick demise of “15 days to slow the spread,” which we can dub the “father of all Covid lies,” the second part of the “safe and effective” marketing campaign for universal vaccination has crumbled into the dustbin of history. The efficacy of Covid vaccines has evaporated so rapidly that “boosters” are already being advised for all Americans.
Dr. Anthony Fauci hasn’t yet thrown in the towel on proclaiming those people who took the initial round of Covid jabs are no longer “fully vaccinated.” But his recent pronouncement that “we believe” that boosters “will likely” provide the highest level of protection yet gives otherwise healthy people enough pause to scratch that booster shot appointment off the calendar.
The ship of fools has sailed on the notion that vaccines ‘stop the spread.’ Despite the vapid promises of the septuagenarian simpleton at the helm of the country, the vaccines have been demonstrated to be a strong vector for the Delta variant. Prominent “fact-checkers” that normally carry water for the president even had to ding him on the myth that vaccines somehow ‘keep others safe.’
Nor do the vaccines even seem to appreciably slow Delta all that much. As Becker News reported in September, well ahead of the Covid curve, there was a developing trend of “more vaccines, more Covid.” As we have seen in sundry cases around the country since then, high vaccination rates do not translate to lower case rates: Vermont is the most vaccinated state in the nation at 68% ‘fully vaccinated’ (for now), but nonetheless is seeing a massive spike in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations…
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