6 Comments

because it has nothing to do with science and all to do with compliance. sigh!

Expand full comment

“You have laboratory confirmation of past infection or had blood tests that show you are immune to measles, mumps, and rubella.”

Key word in this statement is "and". Let's say the child has had measles but not mumps or rubella. Child is still given the MMR vaccine. Another bit of anecdotal information: Adult that never received childhood vaccinations and is being required to submit proof for a university or healthcare employment. There is no adult dosing schedule for an adult vaccine naive person. Or if there is no one is aware of it. The adult is given single booster doses that are intended for adults that were fully vaccinated per the regular childhood schedule.

All done to check boxes and sell vaccines. Has nothing to do with actually effectively protecting health or preventing illness.

Expand full comment

Because it has nothing to do with immunity. There is another agenda, and we can only guess what that is.

Expand full comment

I called the NZ Covid Hotline a couple of months back and informed them I had already had covid (lied) and do I need the injection

Yes.

Why?

Because it gives you extra protection above and beyond what you have.

Oh. I have had measles and mumps as a kid and have never had the MMR shot. Are you saying I should get the MMR shot for extra protection too.

Yes.

Oh. So should I get every vaccine for every illness that I have already recovered from in the past?

You should ask your doctor about that

Expand full comment

I've held out, and so far mandates haven't gotten me, yet. Still worried they will. But for the CDC to say, after 90 days past infection, get the shot, is a political and basically legal decree that I am not in compliance should any mandate come my way. No company goes against CDC "guidance", regardless of the flaws. But if someone doesn't open true congressional hearings into all of this, I am still at risk of being mandated (I do think the mandate nation people are about to give up, but who knows?).

Expand full comment

The general point is well-taken; however, the varicella vaccine is completely unnecessary.

Expand full comment