by Suzanne Burdick, Ph.D., Childrens Health Defense:
The more doses of COVID-19 vaccines a person receives the higher the risk of getting the virus, according to a peer-reviewed study by the Cleveland Clinic.
The researchers stated that the increased risk of COVID-19 associated with higher numbers of vaccine doses was “unexpected.”
Commenting on the study, comedian and political commentator Jimmy Dore tweeted:
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
FYI: It’s not a vaccine. It’s a failed experiment. We were the guinea pigs. https://t.co/Mx42nz4XNP
— Jimmy Dore (@jimmy_dore) May 30, 2023
Robby Soave, host of The Hill’s “Rising,” also commented on the study, saying the findings could not be disregarded as “anti-vaccine” because the researchers were not “setting out to disprove the effectiveness of vaccines.”
Moreover, the higher rate of COVID-19 infections among those who received multiple vaccine doses could not be rationalized by the notion that the individuals who received more doses of the COVID-19 vaccine were elderly — and therefore already more vulnerable to getting a COVID-19 infection — because the study participants were relatively young.
The study participants were Cleveland Clinic employees whose average age was 42.
The researchers suggested that natural immunity likely played a role in providing protection against COVID-19 infection among those with fewer COVID-19 vaccinations.
Soave said:
“I just keep thinking how the places in our society that are still trying to take this decision [of whether to get multiple doses of the COVID-19 vaccine] away from individuals — like university campuses where the bivalent [COVID-19 vaccine] is going to be required still in the fall … like how naive and unscientific it is to take that decision out of people and their doctors.”
Soave also criticized “the attempts to suppress criticism of vaccines — calling it all misinformation — that has occurred online and elsewhere for the last three years.”
“So short-sighted,” he added.
Soave said the official U.S. public health “approach” to COVID-19 vaccination — that everyone should get vaccinated and boosted — does not make sense because, according to the study’s findings, repeated vaccination does not correlate with greater protection against COVID-19 among young people.
“If you’re a healthy young person, really all you’re doing by getting your fifth or something dose is making it slightly more likely you are going to get COVID,” he said.
Read More @ ChildrensHealthDefense.org