“Dangerous and Ineffective” Covid Vaccines “Need to be Withdrawn from Market,” Vaccine Researcher Tells Tucker
(Infowars, 1.26.22)
“The mRNA Covid vaccines need to be withdrawn from the market,” vaccine researcher and author Alex Berenson told Fox News host Tucker Carlson Tuesday night.
The former journalist for the New York Times said the vaccines should be recalled because they’ve proven “a dangerous and ineffective product at this point.”
“We’re at a very dangerous moment, Tucker, and I’m not exaggerating. I think this is probably the most important appearance I’ve had with you in the last two years,” the “Pandemia” author began.
The stat-driven vaccine investigator, who was removed by Twitter last year, added that data he’s seen suggests the vaccines are driving infection rates.
“It is completely clear now that the vaccines don’t really work at all against omicron,” Berenson said. “In these highly-vaccinated and highly boosted countries, rates of infection are incredibly high and rates of serious disease and death are also rising.”
“I have not said this to you before because I’m pretty careful and I’m pretty careful with the data,” Berenson told Tucker, “but these vaccines, these mRNA vaccines, the mRNA COVID vaccines need to be withdrawn from the market now.”
“No one should get them. No one should get boosted. No one should get double boosted. They are a dangerous and ineffective product at this point against omicron.”
Asked what he meant by “dangerous,” Berenson referred to adverse reactions such as the heart condition myocarditis, which depending on the dose could affect teens and college-aged males.
“There’s danger, and the danger is dose-related. That’s a general rule in medicine. the dose makes the poison and giving people more mRNA that’s gonna make them produce spike protein that doesn’t match the current spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 is useless and is likely to wrong-foot their immune systems.”
Berenson says the vaccines and subsequent boosters induce a vicious cycle that weaken immune systems and help spread infection, thereby keeping emergency rooms full in highly-vaccinated areas.