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Re: MinnieM post# 358476

Saturday, 05/08/2021 3:40:21 AM

Saturday, May 08, 2021 3:40:21 AM

Post# of 402891
People are misinterpreting emergency approval for vaccines. It doesn’t mean vaccines are not approved; it means the FDA and other world governing bodies agree that there is enough safety data to show few or no severe effects. Severe effects must be low enough that improvement over unvaccinated populations is a clear result and advantage. This is especially the case that a vaccine must show a clear log-scale reduction in deaths. Furthermore, emergency approval requires continued monitoring and reporting of all adverse events. It also demands that only approved demographics receive the jab.

These same procedures have been in place for 60 years of vaccine development. A good example was 1970s swine flu. It was approved for emergency use, then in expanded approval adverse events began to show. The swine flu vaccine was quickly pulled. The most recent example is the AstraZeneca CoV-2 vaccine, which has now been halted several times across the Atlantic.

There's a reason the FDA hasn't approved them yet, and the manufacturers have immunity from lawsuits. I'm not surprised many won't take them until enough testing has been done to warrant FDA approval without drug company immunity. Especially with such low % numbers of people getting seriously ill.


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