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Joan Zietlow's avatar

As a registered nurse trained in the late 70s and we were taught to always aspirate to make sure that the needle is not in a vein or artery before we inject, I don’t see one single reason why from a positive perspective that you would stop taking that precaution.

I can see trying to tell everybody to minimize the shot time for the clinicians so they can inject more people in a day. They groom the clinicians that things that they were taught are no longer valid but they’re given no reason that they should now not aspirate, except , we’re told not to do it but they don’t give them a good reason why. So a good nurse or a good doctor should be saying just like I did when I saw the very first injection back in February 2020 I knew immediately something was wrong.

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BigCam's avatar

We've been injecting this for 2 years. Not one scientist is going to properly study the propensity of mRNA to last over two weeks in the blood, not one scientist anywhere on earth, none? Ridiculous isn't even the right word. Take 100 people who got their second dose two years ago and test for the mRNA. How difficult a concept is that. I don't believe it's stable enough to last a lifetime but just the same I'm not having any 'relations' with any vaccinated people anytime soon. Nor getting a blood transfusion. I do believe though that the cells converted into spike protein manufacturing sites might just last for the life of the vaccinated and we can only imagine how well that's going to go for their long term health prognosis

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