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One jab after another...

Updated: Sep 8, 2021


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Fact: the jabs are failing

Israel hit the ground running with the COVID-19 vaccine programme and is one of the most vaccinated nations, along with the UK. Around 62% of the total population in Israel and 85% of those eligible have now been vaccinated.


But the jabs are failing. According to Dr Kobi Haviv, the medical director of Israel’s leading centre for respiratory care, 85%-90% of the hospitalizations and 95% of ‘severe’ cases at the Herzog Medical Centre in Jerusalem are in fully vaccinated people (as at the end of August).


So how is the Israeli government responding? Well…


The vaccinated are about to become the unvaccinated

On 29th August, Israeli health officials announced at a press conference that from 1st October, fully vaccinated Green Pass validation status would expire six months after the second dose is received.


The previous week, Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked (Yamina) said: “I believe that the moment the third dose is available to everyone, the green pass should be taken away from anyone who has got vaccinated only twice."


And the Health Minister, Nitan Horowitz, said, “The Green Pass testifies that a person is safe in a certain way…So the moment we know that the vaccine loses its effectiveness after a certain period, there’s no justification for giving a green pass to someone who hasn’t gotten another dose.”


Booster shots are already being given.



So there you have it. If you want to keep your freedoms in Israel, you’re going to have to get a new gene therapy injection – a fresh spike protein pathogen-inducing jab – every 6 months. Otherwise, computer says no.


The question remains: how long before that neat little idea spreads across the West?


Although the UK doesn't currently have vaccine passports, boosters are already planned:


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(The Guardian, 22nd July 2021)



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(BBC.co.uk, 19th August 2021)

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