Back in mid-June, the FDA and CDC Director Rochelle P. Walensky endorsed the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices’ (ACIP) recommendation that all children from 6 months to 5 years of age should receive a covid vaccine.
It meant that nearly 20 million additional children were now eligible for the clot-shot, uh um, we mean jab.
The likes of Dr Pierre Kory, Dr Peter McCullough, and Steve Kirsch promptly took to various alternative outlets, still ballsy enough to have them on, and vigorously expressed their disapproval.
Kory was one of the most outspoken:
In short, the benefit-to-risk ratio simply did not weigh up - even by the CDC’s standards.
According to the CDC’s own data, available by mid-2021, kids are far more likely to die from cancer, drowning, the flu, homicide, and suicide, than from covid.
Remember, these numbers were crunched when the stronger strains were supposedly in circulation.
Now, many of the vaccine-sceptic community have been worrying about the effect of highly-suppressive big tech policy. It seems, at least, that some of these worries may have been in vain.
According to new CDC data, only 5% of parents have agreed to follow CDC guidance and vaccinate their child with at least one dose of the covid vaccine.
That means a whopping 94.8% of parents with children under five years old have completely ignored the national public health agency of the United States - a staggering number.
Although, there were signs earlier this year:
But what’s more interesting is the 5.2% of parents who’ve allowed their children to be administered only a single dose.
Could it be the case that the children who received that first dose experienced a breakthrough infection? Did the children exhibit symptoms that put off the parent from organising a second? Did they notice their child experience an adverse reaction? Perhaps after hearing blatant lie upon lie from various CDC officials, parents found themselves already withdrawn. Or possibly, the likes of McCullough and co, finally achieved considerable reach into that demographic.
Whatever the cause, likely to be a combination of the above, how will these parents feel at the prospect of future mandates not for their kids but for themselves?