I speak from experience when I say that natural immunity is far more effective than the clotshot. The first time I caught Covid there was a 3 or 4 day period when fatigue and body aches kept me off my feet as much as possible. I'm recovering from a second infection right now and I was out of commission for less than 24 hours this time around. Meanwhile I have family members who got the vax, and they it way worse than me and it gets worse every time. My mother had brain fog for a month last time she got it, and she got one booster.
There have been vaccines that can make a virus more dangerous- because the body responds by producing what it was vaccinated against while the virus has changed…
Yup, it's called ADE and it's what happened with every single prior coronavirus vaccine they ever tested. Thank god all the test animals for the covid vaccine all died in the trials and it was rushed out to the world population at once.
Getting injected after you had natural immunity from an infection will destroy your natural immunity to substitute it with the jab's short-term, weaker immunity that falls into negative immunity after about 20 weeks :
The government here insisted you get injected as fast as possible after an infection, thus they caused increased circulatiom of the virus by nuking people's natural immunity.
Yeah, that was my thought too. The second infection is probably going to be weaker regardless. As to why vaccinated people got sicker, it's probably not because natural immunity is better (although it is), but because the vaccines provide negative protection.
The last time I had it was last spring. I have no idea which strain I got either time. I didn't even get tested the 2nd time around because the symptoms are distinct enough for me to know that it's Covid.
Same here. I had what was likely Delta after Thanksgiving 2021. I was sick for about a week with a bad cough, high fever, loss of appetite and fatigue. It was comparable in severity to the flu or a bad case of bronchitis. It was unpleasant, but generic sick.
Fast forward six months later. Both of my parents get Covid, so I stay with them to take care of them, trusting in my natural immunity. With zero distancing, masking, or other precauttions, I finally got a little sick after a week. I had a headache and fatigue that lasted half a day. Meanwhile, I have vaxxed and boosted family members who've had full-blown Covid several times.
The most I've done over the past 2 years is cut out sugar from my diet. Haven't bothered with masks or any of that bullshit. No coof juice. My mother apparently brought it home but the most I had was a sneeze that might have been something else. Worse than I had to deal with, though, was a case of Bell's Palsy which is a pretty scary thing to wake up to if you don't know any better.
I speak from experience when I say that natural immunity is far more effective than the clotshot. The first time I caught Covid there was a 3 or 4 day period when fatigue and body aches kept me off my feet as much as possible. I'm recovering from a second infection right now and I was out of commission for less than 24 hours this time around. Meanwhile I have family members who got the vax, and they it way worse than me and it gets worse every time. My mother had brain fog for a month last time she got it, and she got one booster.
I share your observations in my family too.
There have been vaccines that can make a virus more dangerous- because the body responds by producing what it was vaccinated against while the virus has changed…
Yup, it's called ADE and it's what happened with every single prior coronavirus vaccine they ever tested. Thank god all the test animals for the covid vaccine all died in the trials and it was rushed out to the world population at once.
Funny enough almost all coronaviruses are in that category. We knew in 2019 that vaccines for COVID were less than useless.
Getting injected after you had natural immunity from an infection will destroy your natural immunity to substitute it with the jab's short-term, weaker immunity that falls into negative immunity after about 20 weeks :
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2209371?query=featured_home
The government here insisted you get injected as fast as possible after an infection, thus they caused increased circulatiom of the virus by nuking people's natural immunity.
Yeah, that was my thought too. The second infection is probably going to be weaker regardless. As to why vaccinated people got sicker, it's probably not because natural immunity is better (although it is), but because the vaccines provide negative protection.
The last time I had it was last spring. I have no idea which strain I got either time. I didn't even get tested the 2nd time around because the symptoms are distinct enough for me to know that it's Covid.
Same here. I had what was likely Delta after Thanksgiving 2021. I was sick for about a week with a bad cough, high fever, loss of appetite and fatigue. It was comparable in severity to the flu or a bad case of bronchitis. It was unpleasant, but generic sick.
Fast forward six months later. Both of my parents get Covid, so I stay with them to take care of them, trusting in my natural immunity. With zero distancing, masking, or other precauttions, I finally got a little sick after a week. I had a headache and fatigue that lasted half a day. Meanwhile, I have vaxxed and boosted family members who've had full-blown Covid several times.
The most I've done over the past 2 years is cut out sugar from my diet. Haven't bothered with masks or any of that bullshit. No coof juice. My mother apparently brought it home but the most I had was a sneeze that might have been something else. Worse than I had to deal with, though, was a case of Bell's Palsy which is a pretty scary thing to wake up to if you don't know any better.