How the Monkeypox Scam Mirrors the COVID Scam–unbelievable

 The vaccine does not prevent infection

Just like the COVID vaccines, it turns out that in the animal experiments, Jynneos did not stop monkeys getting monkeypox,
but did stop them from dying.  Since the current strain of monkeypox is
mild, and virtually no one dies from monkeypox, this is another reason
to avoid these dangerous vaccines like the plague—they won’t stop the
infection!

According
to the CDC ‘s briefing to its advisory committee on June 23, which I
attended, this is generally a mild disease, requires no specific
treatment, and the people who were hospitalized were hospitalized for
pain control. (For example, perirectal lesions can induce very painful
sphincter spasms.)

So, in terms of deaths, in 2022 there are now
a total of 5 deaths that have been associated with Moneypox reported
outside Africa, and 4 reported from Nigeria. I found only two for which
there was discussion of cause of death: the Brazilian had lymphoma
(lymph cancer), and the person from Peru died of a preexisting
condition. We know nothing about what killed the other seven.

CDC has been hiding its vaccine study of 1600 Congolese healthcare workers

CDC
began a study of the Jynneos vaccine in the DRC in 2017 and finished
recruiting by September 2020, according to the required notification in
ClinicalTrials.gov.
The idea was to vaccinate people most susceptible to monkeypox and see
how many got monkeypox, and what the side effects were. CDC has a lot
of data, and the person who briefed the advisory committee on June 23,
Brett Peterson, is the Principal Investigator of this Congo trial.
Where is CDC’s briefing on this study’s results? This was the first
study of vaccine efficacy in the world—why is CDC being coy about the
results?

The same 2 scientists who hyped COVID’s natural origin now hyping Monkeypox’ natural origin

Two
of the same scientists who hyped the natural origin of COVID are now
trying to explain the excessive number of mutations in the current
Moneypox variant, which appears to be derived from a strain isolated in
labs in 3 countries in 2018-9. Double-stranded DNA viruses don’t
usually mutate this fast…since we have a 2018 start date, the mutations
expected could be calculated. A lot of the mutations could have been
induced by an enzyme used in labs. See
DoorlessCarp’s June 5 update for more on the science.

The
two people are Andrew Rambaut and Michael Worobey. Rambaut was one of
the 5 authors of the Nature Medicine article that Tony Fauci caused to
be written, to cover up the lab origin that Fauci himself funded.
Worobey just published an article claiming—despite everything—that COVID
came from nature. Now they are doing the same for Monkeypox.

https://virological.org/t/initial-observations-about-putative-apobec3-deaminase-editing-driving-short-term-evolution-of-mpxv-since-2017/830

https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/02/health/monkeypox-endemic-silent-spread/index.html

US Government has created a fake shortage of vaccine

Well yes, of course, they always do that to fan the flames of demand.

But this is a lot bigger than that. The USG already owns 16 million doses, stored frozen in Denmark, and had spent well over $1 Billion on Jynneos vaccines before Moneypox was identified in the west.

Despite
the Denmark factory’s “fill and finish” facility being completed in
2021, and despite the USG allotting $44 million for “qualification” of
that same facility in January 2019, the FDA only got around to finishing
its inspection on July 27, 2022.  

Supposedly this prevented the US from getting its hands on any of its supply stored overseas. Duh? And the USG ordered 1.4 million doses as recently as 2020, yet to be delivered.

Meantime, President Biden asked for another $7 Billion for the $Moneypox emergency.
No wonder they plan to change the name of Moneypox, which is said to
be stigmatizing to Africans. They mislead. It is stigmatizing to
politicians. 

Because of the vaccine shortage, existing vaccine will get a liability waiver

How sweet is that?

Jynneos
is licensed, and is being used for its labelled indication (prevention
of Moneypox) so the manufacturer ought to be liable for injuries. The USG might
also be liable, if it steered you wrong about the safety or efficacy of
the vaccine…or if it hid a study it had conducted, for example.

But
since we have a shortage, the USG in its benevolence and wisdom is
going to dilute it and give recipients instead a 20% dose, administered
intradermally instead of subcutaneously. But in order to make this
kosher (kosher for whom?) the
DHHS and FDA are issuing the vaccine an emergency use authorization, and we all know what that means. You can’t sue anybody even if the vaccine kills you.

You
can apply to DHHS for small benefits from its Countermeasures Injury
Compensation Program, but you might be waiting a long time for an
answer. The program has denied about 95% of petitioners, and no one has
received a payout for a COVID vaccine injury yet.

This also
means that a USG contractor will now be inserted between the Danish
manufacturer and the recipient. I wonder what diluent the USG will
instruct them to add, or supply itself, for that matter?

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One Comment

  1. ''DID WE WIN ONE?''
    CAN THE UNVACCINATED GET THEIR JOBS BACK?

    ''CDC loosens guidance on quarantining, social distancing for COVID-19''

    Details: The agency is relaxing both quarantine and social distancing guidance.

    Unvaccinated people who are exposed to COVID-19 are no longer advised to quarantine for five days if they have not tested positive for the virus or are not showing symptoms.

    ''Instead, aligning with the same rules as for vaccinated individuals, the CDC now suggests wearing a high-quality mask for 10 days and getting tested on day 5.''

    The agency is also no longer emphasizing social distancing as a key method to reduce the risk of exposure.

    Screening testing of asymptomatic people without known exposures is also no longer recommended in most community settings, the CDC said.

    https://www.axios.com/2022/08/11/cdc-covid-quarantining-social-distancing

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