I manage a group of community gardens in New Brunswick, New Jersey, home to Rutgers University’s main campus. In Spring, 2021, when VaxxFest was in full swing, a familiar, knitted blazer-and-tie-wearing Rutgers medical school professor/gardener showed up one evening wearing a pro-vaxx sticker on his lapel. He told grimy, sweaty, t-shirted me that I should take the jab, as he just had. He smiled, and in his German accent said, with conviction, “Oh, they’re (the jabs are) “very good!”
I told him that I wouldn’t ever take the shots.
He asked why. I told him the virus never scared me. I opined that the reaction to the virus was way out of proportion to the risk, and that shots not only weren’t needed but could be dangerous because they were scarcely tested. I also said that the government and media would falsely credit the shots for ending a “Pandemic” that was initiated by statistical sleight-of-hand and c/would be ended the same way. I didn’t want, by injecting, to support the doubly false narrative of an extreme crisis solved by Pharma.
A week later, I had essentially the same discussion with a well-dressed, retired female obstetrician/gardener, who had arrived in an expensive new car with her boyfriend. She announced their jointly vaxxed status and asserted that the shots “would stop the spread” and that my refusal to inject showed that I didn’t “understand immunology.”
I countered that I had taken, read and observed plenty of Biology and understood immunology at least as well as an obstetrician does. I asked her to explain what she knew that I didn’t. She offered only a net assertion that the shots would prevent infection and spread. I noted that there was no specific proof for her stance and again declared that the threat posed by this virus was badly overblown and that there was no reason for me, or any healthy person, to inject and to risk bad effects. Besides, if the shots protected those who took them, why did injectees care if others didn’t inject?
The med professor “got Covid” shortly thereafter. I suspect that the retired obstetrician also was illin’ before long; nearly everyone I know who injected, got sick. So much for the “experts.” She didn’t show up again, perhaps because she was embarrassed to admit to unvaxxed, unsick, work-clothes-wearing me, her beloved shots’ failure. Though, like all the vaxxed/sick, she would have undoubtedly insisted that jabbing kept her out of the hospital. Vaxxers definitely drank the Kool-Aid.
I could, based on knowledge and logic, write much more about the shots. But many others, including Substacker Colleen Huber, have already done so. And the vaxx harm story is still unfolding. For now, vaxx efficacy and side effects are clearly trending negative, with strong correlation between injection and infection, and overall deaths trending 9-15% higher in highly-vaxxed nations. The media is covering this up. Because that’s what “journalists” do, right?
But today, I’ll focus on colleges and their shot mandates.
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