Would there be any legitimate reasons for these ingredients in the polio vaccine?
Do you think that different batches of Pfizer Covid "vaccine" have different ingredients? I do, just to explain why some people have no side effects (yet) and others do. I know that everyone is different with different reactions, but as this is all one big experiment it makes sense to have different batch ingredients.
To accept any reason as legitimate you first have to accept the claim (essential to the practice of modern medicine) that it is safe, and even advisable, to inject known poisons directly into the bloodstream (in any quantity at all).
I don't know if different batches have different ingredients. It would be very bad practice, if so! Not everyone reacts in the same way to the same substances, so it is conceivable some people will not be negatively affected; others will be injured or die; while others may have health issues that show up later. A lot of this also depends on the general health and resilience of the particular individual.
What I do know is that even if they try to maintain consistency in production, they cannot do it. Lots of things crop up: production problems related to equipment and materials, contamination issues, and so on. These cause variations in lots. Some vaccine lots, known as "hot lots," are associated with high rates of injury and death.
Would there be any legitimate reasons for these ingredients in the polio vaccine?
Do you think that different batches of Pfizer Covid "vaccine" have different ingredients? I do, just to explain why some people have no side effects (yet) and others do. I know that everyone is different with different reactions, but as this is all one big experiment it makes sense to have different batch ingredients.
To accept any reason as legitimate you first have to accept the claim (essential to the practice of modern medicine) that it is safe, and even advisable, to inject known poisons directly into the bloodstream (in any quantity at all).
I don't know if different batches have different ingredients. It would be very bad practice, if so! Not everyone reacts in the same way to the same substances, so it is conceivable some people will not be negatively affected; others will be injured or die; while others may have health issues that show up later. A lot of this also depends on the general health and resilience of the particular individual.
What I do know is that even if they try to maintain consistency in production, they cannot do it. Lots of things crop up: production problems related to equipment and materials, contamination issues, and so on. These cause variations in lots. Some vaccine lots, known as "hot lots," are associated with high rates of injury and death.
And vaccines for these "contagions" came out when they were almost gone
https://learntherisk.org/vaccines/diseases/
Polio-ddt
Smallpox- sanitation
And so on