Covid Booster?

The next Covid booster is available, and I am going to assume that further boosters will be available in the future. The question for some individuals now, and in the future will be: “should I get the booster?” or “should my kids get the booster?” For some the question is not at all problematic … “of course I will be getting this booster, and the next, and the next!” Likewise for others the question does not really involve any actual decision making … “since I never got any of the initial Covid shots, no way would I ever consider a Covid booster.” The individuals in these two aforementioned groups have already bought the farm one way or the other, and there is really no decision to be made.

However, there are some other different groups in which there is an actual decision to be made:

First: If you have already had Covid, should you get a booster? 

(For me the decision here is simple … I have already had Covid, and for me this decision is easy … ‘No,’ I will not be getting the booster.)

Second: A separate group is made up of those who have had the initial series of the two vaccines, and even perhaps a single booster.

If the vaccine booster had no possible adverse effects, then I suppose the answer would be … “sure, why not.” However, that is not the case as there are potential significant adverse effects, and here I am not talking about having a sore arm. Granted the odds of having a serious side-effect are small, however, some of the more severe side-effects can be life changing, and there is no ‘do over!’

I just read a long detailed article from Epoch Health entitled:

“Spike Protein From Infection and Vaccines Contributing to Autoimmune Diseases, Studies Suggest”

The key points in this long and complicated article are as follows:

Since the rollout of the COVID-19 mRNA and DNA injections, reports of many autoimmune conditions have either suddenly appeared, or relapsed, often with worsened symptoms.

Autoimmunity is a health condition where the body’s immune system becomes confused and unable to differentiate between self and non-self and attacks its own tissues.

In the case of COVID-19 and its vaccines, many studies since the start of the pandemic have shown that the spike protein shares similarities with human proteins both in its structure and in its basic chemical sequence.

This means the spike protein can increase the risk of developing autoimmunity and implies that the mRNA and DNA vaccines, which cause the body to make large amounts of spike protein, would do the same.

A recent study found the spike protein shares similarities with 34 different human proteins in amino acid sequences in sets of sixes. These include proteins found in the thyroid, brain, nose, ear, skin, muscles, heart, blood, nerves, joints, intestines, and many more.

So to me the initial question becomes, “At this point in time, is there any reason to add more spike proteins to anyone’s body?” 

To my way of thinking, the answer in general,  is an unequivocal …. “No!”

10/20/22

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