Okay, Dr. Malone and anyone else who reads it. Look at this gem I found on the website for the large hospital my (now former) physician practice is affiliated with:
"The Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna vaccine use mRNA to instruct the cells in your body to make a harmless piece of the “spike protein” found on the surface of COVID-19. You…
Okay, Dr. Malone and anyone else who reads it. Look at this gem I found on the website for the large hospital my (now former) physician practice is affiliated with:
"The Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna vaccine use mRNA to instruct the cells in your body to make a harmless piece of the “spike protein” found on the surface of COVID-19. Your immune system is tricked into thinking this is a virus and makes antibodies. A live virus is not included in the vaccine. Your body destroys the mRNA and gets rid of it. It doesn’t stay in your body or alter any DNA. The other ingredients in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are salt, sugar, and fat."
I think I'll do a screenshot for possible future use. When I went back to the site and looked further, I found that they also say they are offering the shots to children as young as 6 months and are confident they are safe. While they acknowledge no testing has been done as to safety for pregnant or breastfeeding "people," they warn that the risk of covid is high, so these people should consider the shots. They confidently state, "A rumor on the Internet claims a protein created by the body after vaccination is similar to a protein that is needed for placental formation. This is not true. The proteins are not similar nor do they impact fertility or affect a pregnancy. The vaccine manufacturers are monitoring people in the clinical trials who became pregnant."
I assume so, but when that's the accepted narrative, how can it be challenged? Particularly in NC, where our governor and attorney general are both liberal and do whatever they wish.
I don't know, Anne. I like your screenshot idea. Here is one optimistic idea: write them a thoughtful, respectful, well-reasoned letter with references. Hand deliver or send certified mail with signature. I can even imagine a crowdsourced letter with the best and brightest minds on Substack. A letter that addresses the false claims one by one. At minimum, if they don't change their clinic assertions, at least you have let them know, and you have a record of that. (Maybe they just don't know? Maybe they don't know that Florida, Sweden, UK and Denmark have reversed course on the covid shots program and they could, too. ) At maximum, you might open some minds or change policies at that clinic.
Thank you for the suggestion! I will save these links and think about it. This is not just one physician's office, it is a huge hospital system with many, many providers' offices. The local office I contacted has no option but to follow the hospital system's guidelines. It would need to get to someone who can actually bring about change. I think they would be more inclined to consider it if someone threatened a lawsuit due to fraud. Maybe I could get my local news station to cover this. (Hahahahaha, the station is woke and liberal.) After all, they covered a recent story where a woman went to a established, popular, highly restaurant and called the police because her smoked bbq pork had some pink and she thought it was not done. She's thinking of filing a civil lawsuit. If a court would take that up, that ought to consider my complaint, right?? Right.
One problem hospitals face now is that the feds require all medicare,/mediaid providers to jab employees and that absurdity was recently upheld by a Supreme (Barrett I think). Stupid but there it is.
That's interesting. I read this article about how the mRNA isn't really mRNA, because it contains synthetic bases. https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/when-is-mrna-not-really-mrna. But the Washington Post says the author is a fraud, so I have to believe what they say.
Okay, Dr. Malone and anyone else who reads it. Look at this gem I found on the website for the large hospital my (now former) physician practice is affiliated with:
"The Pfizer vaccine and the Moderna vaccine use mRNA to instruct the cells in your body to make a harmless piece of the “spike protein” found on the surface of COVID-19. Your immune system is tricked into thinking this is a virus and makes antibodies. A live virus is not included in the vaccine. Your body destroys the mRNA and gets rid of it. It doesn’t stay in your body or alter any DNA. The other ingredients in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are salt, sugar, and fat."
there are laws against health care consumer fraud, making fraudulent statements. Am I right?
We are learning at many levels that we are blessed with a multi-tiered legal system. What is illegal for you and me is not for "them"
I think I'll do a screenshot for possible future use. When I went back to the site and looked further, I found that they also say they are offering the shots to children as young as 6 months and are confident they are safe. While they acknowledge no testing has been done as to safety for pregnant or breastfeeding "people," they warn that the risk of covid is high, so these people should consider the shots. They confidently state, "A rumor on the Internet claims a protein created by the body after vaccination is similar to a protein that is needed for placental formation. This is not true. The proteins are not similar nor do they impact fertility or affect a pregnancy. The vaccine manufacturers are monitoring people in the clinical trials who became pregnant."
I assume so, but when that's the accepted narrative, how can it be challenged? Particularly in NC, where our governor and attorney general are both liberal and do whatever they wish.
I don't know, Anne. I like your screenshot idea. Here is one optimistic idea: write them a thoughtful, respectful, well-reasoned letter with references. Hand deliver or send certified mail with signature. I can even imagine a crowdsourced letter with the best and brightest minds on Substack. A letter that addresses the false claims one by one. At minimum, if they don't change their clinic assertions, at least you have let them know, and you have a record of that. (Maybe they just don't know? Maybe they don't know that Florida, Sweden, UK and Denmark have reversed course on the covid shots program and they could, too. ) At maximum, you might open some minds or change policies at that clinic.
RFK Jr. has a great letter here:
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/wp-content/uploads/CHD-Letter-to-FDA-VRBPAC_2022-06-10.pdf
And, this is another fantastic letter template:
https://informedchoicewa.substack.com/p/our-comment-to-wa-state-public-health
I choose to remain optimistic, engaged and believe that most people do better when they know better.
Thank you for the suggestion! I will save these links and think about it. This is not just one physician's office, it is a huge hospital system with many, many providers' offices. The local office I contacted has no option but to follow the hospital system's guidelines. It would need to get to someone who can actually bring about change. I think they would be more inclined to consider it if someone threatened a lawsuit due to fraud. Maybe I could get my local news station to cover this. (Hahahahaha, the station is woke and liberal.) After all, they covered a recent story where a woman went to a established, popular, highly restaurant and called the police because her smoked bbq pork had some pink and she thought it was not done. She's thinking of filing a civil lawsuit. If a court would take that up, that ought to consider my complaint, right?? Right.
One problem hospitals face now is that the feds require all medicare,/mediaid providers to jab employees and that absurdity was recently upheld by a Supreme (Barrett I think). Stupid but there it is.
That's interesting. I read this article about how the mRNA isn't really mRNA, because it contains synthetic bases. https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/when-is-mrna-not-really-mrna. But the Washington Post says the author is a fraud, so I have to believe what they say.