The ‘case’ for jab passports hits the skids: Part Two
- beyondthemainstream
- Nov 2, 2021
- 1 min read
An article just published by the Brownstone Institute, written by the eminently-qualified Dr Paul Elias Alexander, summarises 16 studies and reports from around the world looking into vaccine efficacy.
Dr Alexander concludes:
“What these studies show, are that vaccines are important to reduce severe disease and death, but unable to prevent the disease from spreading….While the vaccines provide individual benefits to the vaccinee, and especially to older high-risk people, the public benefit of universal vaccination is in grave doubt…This unravels the rationale for vaccine mandates and passports.”
You can read the full article on the Brownstone Institute site, but it’s worth noting that several studies show that when a vaccinated person is infected, they have a higher viral load and are therefore more likely to spread the virus:



And the review also quotes our own UK Vaccine Surveillance report, as mentioned in my previous blog:

And, from Bloomberg:
'People inoculated against Covid-19 are just as likely to spread the delta variant of the virus to contacts in their household as those who haven’t had shots, according to new research.'
Given that it is the fully vaccinated around the world that are increasingly the ones attending large events and dining indoors, it seems perfectly reasonable to assume the virus will happily keep spreading and mutuating to evade the spike-specific binding antibodies created by the jabs.
Meanwhile, those of us with healthy immune systems full of broad-spectrum neutralising antibodies and killer lymphocytes, who are perfectly equipped to handle any variant into the future, continue to be refused full participation in society and blamed for this ‘pandemic’.

Comments