None of the inoculations begin administered in the name of preventing the spread of COVID19 is approved or proven for that purpose, so this is troubling. At least eight nations have stopped distributing one COVID19 “vaccine” while investigating a troubling side-effect. Blood clotting.
Related: If The “Experimental” COVID Vaccine Kills You, Your Life Insurer May Not Have to Pay Benefits
“The European Medicines Agency (EMA) is already investigating a number of reports of thromboembolic (blood clotting) events following vaccination with Covid-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca,” a statement from the Irish Department of Health said, according to the Independent. “Further information is expected from the EMA in the next few days, which will include a review of these additional events.”
Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Austria, Romania, Italy, Thailand, and Ireland have halted distribution while investigations are underway.
Public health officials continue to insist the benefits outweigh the risks. The experimental vaccine manufacturer connected to the clotting incidents notes that “the reported numbers of these types of events for COVID-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca are not greater than the number that would have occurred naturally in the unvaccinated population,” the pharmaceutical giant said in a statement, according to the BBC.”
I’m not any-sort of anti-vaxxer, but I’ve chosen to take a hard pass.
Vaccines have saved millions upon millions of lives and improved the quality of tens of millions more. That’s just an interesting fact. But no one should make you, force you or coerce you to take anything, especially something that has never been through human trials and certainly not under these circumstances.
I am also a supporter of the “right to try.” You should be free to volunteer for unproven or unapproved treatments if you agree that the benefit outweighs the risk.
In this case, I don’t see it that way, but I would never stop you from seeing it differently.
Most of the people I know who have had a shot reported mild side effects, none of them serious. But it is worth noting that this is a human trial, and the odds are good that in keeping with protocol, some percentage of recipients may get a placebo.
No one in the public health machinery is admitting to or reporting that, but it would not be a proper trial without that, and if it is true, someone knows who got what.