The source material :
https://rumble.com/v2yi04g-episode-327-pandemic-of-lies.html
also here :
https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2019/12/02/default-calendar/global-vaccine-safety-summit
The Goal : How to stop vaccine hesitancy (in adults) – Prof Heidi Larsen, Director, Vaccine Confidence Project, WHO.
This transcript begins at 00:30:50.
/quote
I think that one of our biggest challenges is, as Bob said this morning, or yesterday, we're in a unique position in human history where we've shifted the human population to vaccine-induced, to dependency on vaccine-induced immunity.
And that's on the great assumption that populations would cooperate.
And for many years, people lined up. The six vaccines, people were there. They saw the reason.
We're in a very fragile state now.
We have developed a world that is dependent on vaccinations.
We don't have a choice, but to make that effort.
We've developed a world that's dependent on vaccines.
/unquote
A world that's dependent on vaccines – for immunity.
Before getting into the accuracy of the view stated above, one thing is clear. A world dependent on vaccines and vaccination will be very profitable for Big Pharma, will enhance government control, and will likely be problematic for the individual.
As Del Bigtree point out immediately after that clip, not one vaccine has ever managed to provide lifelong immunity. That natural sort you get every time you get a virus. Hence the people in that room that have never had a measles vaccine, the adults, are the only ones with immunity to measles.
The recent outbreak of measles in California was notably also in previously vaccinated adults, and 30% of the infections were the vaccine strain. That is what's now called a breakthrough infection, and due to waning immunity.
Hence that earlier reference to “vaccine-induced immunity” is likely not what it seems to be. As in “I do not think those words mean what you thought they meant in 2019”. Or perhaps the Professor was exactly right.
Roll forward a few decades and the unvaccinated adult population is gone. And with it the herd immunity that it provided to the already vaccinated, waning immunity, population of adults and children in the USA.
The thing that is implicit in Prof Larsen's contribution is that they had this idea that once vaccinated as a child, the adults would continue to get their shots. Maybe they will, maybe they won't, but it sure does explain the hype about “vaccine hesitancy”. To deliver the full picture needed for informed consent, they have to admit they messed up.
For the measles outbreaks, that admission comes in the form of an outbreak of vaccine resistant measles in the Ukraine in early 2019. They never achieved their goal - herd immunity.
This is why there is an adult vaccination schedule:
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/schedules/hcp/imz/adult.html#table-age
Note: for measles, one or two doses for ages 19-49.
As Del Bigtree put it, “the only thing they eradicated was herd immunity itself.”
The unvaccinated are not the problem.
The vulnerable vaccinated terrify them.
/quote
They're not the number one most powerful lobby in Washington outspending oil and gas two to one because they're trying to vaccinate the last three percent of the hippie kids.
You're not spending more than the lobbyists that are, we're fighting wars in the Middle East for.
They were always coming after you.
It was always about you.
You are the cash cow.
You are the future of the pharmaceutical takeover of the world.
/unquote
And that is before we get into the mRNA Gene Therapy. The attraction of the process is an ability to provide “medical countermeasures” to every virus and to every bacteria – absent safety checks, it can be done overnight. At a price. They pretty much told us that in Session one of the Event201 in October 2019.
Hence after some crazy stuff to provide end runs around safety etc, including WarpSpeed, Hydroxychloroquine, Ivermectin, Midazolam, PCR tests, and a ton of gaslighting, the mRNA technology got into actual arms on a global scale in December 2020.
There are questions about deaths and Covid-19 deaths that are, not only unanswered, the questions are not yet asked.
There are questions about the quality control of mRNA serum. Independent research questions “Howbadismybatch”?
And within the last couple of weeks, researchers in Denmark segregate batches into : fast kill; slow kill; and 30% no kill (perhaps). Those are my designations because the distribution of data shown in chart form makes no other sense.
Given some of the things I have read this could just be down to production difficulties in one or more stages of the serum production. The “placebo” effect could be the result of production limits and the provision of saline solution to make up for production losses. I do not know that for a fact, but it is something to factor in.
So, this is where we are. And it's not a good place. But it could be worse.