The UK government once again has sheepishly provided the answer this week, as reported by Investment Watch. In 100% of the cases of young children developing this new life-threatening strain of hepatitis, the kids were breastfed by fully vaccinated mothers. The lies would be almost comical at this point if we didn’t have children dying because of these so-called “vaccines.”
Then there’s this:
As doctors try to track down the source of the outbreak, they have absolutely insisted that it’s not the vaccine. Many of the kids contracting the illness haven’t been vaccinated at all, they claimed. But then when the UK began investigating, doctors discovered something worrisome. All the 11- to 16-year-olds who developed this strain of the virus had in fact had at least one COVID shot. Whoops.
Well, since I can no longer reply to comments, I’ll respond to Rus’s objection here. Basically, I think it’s good journalism to listen to as many sources as possible. The governmental sources have not proved terribly reliable. So let’s wait and see. If this proceeds in the usual manner, we’ll learn more soon enough. But I am not a knee-jerk believer in whatever the government tells me. I save faith for God.
Also there’s this: Madrid’s Deputy Minister for Public Health Claims Cases of Hepatitis on Young Kids are “Related to Covid-19 Vaccine.” So the story linked is accurate in reporting that.
Frank, this is terrible and dangerous misinformation. Look at the source. The publication is a fringe, hack periodical. And what evil idiot wrote this article? No one would take responsibility, and whomever did it, is very likely unqualified--and if not unqualified, then paid off, a paid killer.
ReplyDeleteHere's a more sane look at where we are today with this: A Mysterious Hepatitis Outbreak Among Children Is Baffling Doctors.
Real scientists could not be "suspecting" the vaccine from the start, but they would look into it. "And we can rule out any type of relation to the [COVID-19] vaccine,” says Dr. Markus Buchfellner, a pediatric infectious-disease physician at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and a co-author of the CDC report.