Government Reports: Pfizer & Moderna Made Deadly Batches of the Covid-19 Vaccines

Government Reports: Pfizer & Moderna Made Deadly Batches of the Covid-19 Vaccines

According to data from the Centers for Disease Control, certain lot numbers of the Covid-19 vaccine have been linked to a significant number of adverse reactions and deaths. Despite this, regulators have elected not to withdraw these batches from circulation, and they continue to be given to the public.

The figures reveal that every single death reported as an adverse reaction to the Covid-19 injections has been caused by just 4 to 5% of the batches of Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines produced.

Deadly vaccine lots

It’s concerning that a small number of “deadly” vaccine lots were distributed throughout the United States, while only a few locations received “benign” lots. This information was gathered from the publicly accessible VAERS database, which is a program for vaccine safety managed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The program collects reports from doctors, nurses, and patients about possible harmful side effects that occur after vaccination to assess if the benefit outweighs the risk of using a particular vaccine. You can view the VAERS database.

The database reports were extracted until October 15th, 2021.

These reports consisted of all the negative effects mentioned for Pfizer and Moderna mRNA Covid-19 vaccines, along with those for influenza vaccines. This control dataset was created to compare the adverse reactions.

We suggest that you check out the original article in order to learn more details about this.

Covid in the news

It has been just revealed that after calling the whole thing a conspiracy theory, the CDC and New York Times have just admitted that the covid deaths have been overcounted. Check out the latest reports about this below.

Here is a relevant tweet about the matter:

Check out our previous post in order to learn more details about this.

Post Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.