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Author Topic: The Purebloods and the Lepers.  (Read 6559 times)

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The Purebloods and the Lepers.
« on: September 28, 2021, 07:16:58 PM »
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  • I thought it was neat when people started calling the fellow unvaxxed the "purebloods" because we haven't given up our humanity to get the gene altering death vaxx. Then we could call the vaxxed the "lepers". Us purebloods have to keep together and help each other out so we do not get taken over by the lepers. 

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #1 on: September 28, 2021, 07:20:01 PM »
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  • I'd like to start a trendy company selling "Pureblood" t-shirts.


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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #2 on: September 28, 2021, 07:28:07 PM »
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  • I thought it was neat when people started calling the fellow unvaxxed the "purebloods" because we haven't given up our humanity to get the gene altering death vaxx. Then we could call the vaxxed the "lepers". Us purebloods have to keep together and help each other out so we do not get taken over by the lepers.
    That's the ironic thing, isn't it? Those vaxxed, who are now essentially lepers, are treating the unvaxxed as lepers.

    But, as funny and true as I find it, I think it's dangerous to fall into the same old dialectic of "us vs them", Coke vs Pepsi, Republican vs Democrat, game of divide and conquer that those in power have been playing for decades now.

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #3 on: September 29, 2021, 07:23:39 AM »
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  • Reminds me of Dr. Seuss' The Sneetches:

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #4 on: September 29, 2021, 11:05:13 AM »
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  •  https://twitter.com/therecount/status/1442926100875673601

    LeBron sold his soul and is now a leper. But I think Kyrie Irving is still a pureblood.


    Offline Emile

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #5 on: July 22, 2024, 08:11:40 AM »
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  • Dating Divide Over Vaccination Status Splits Those Looking for a Partner

    [color=rgb(38 38 38/var(--tw-text-opacity))]‘Pure blood’ parties becoming a thing for unvaccinated singles in the post-pandemic dating world.


    [/font][/size][/color]


    Allan Stein

    By Allan Stein

    7/21/2024

    Updated:

    7/21/2024



    PHOENIX—Courtney Furlong, 36, had always considered modern dating a hit-or-miss prospect, even before COVID-19 vaccines, masks, and lockdowns turned the world upside down.



    But today, Ms. Furlong said it’s downright “terrible” trying to find a suitable dating partner who isn’t vaccinated.



    Having chosen to avoid taking the COVID-19 shots over concerns about their safety, the Phoenix resident now finds the dating market more restricted and challenging than ever.

    She said that many vaccinated people refuse to date the unvaccinated, and vice versa.



    “I’m at the age now where I want to have children. My situation now is, who should I have a baby with?” Ms. Furlong said, standing at the vegan bar at The Giving Tree in Phoenix, watching 50 other unvaccinated people mix and mingle on a hot Monday evening.



    Who knows? Tonight could be the night she'll meet her significant other, she said—or at least make new like-minded friends.

    “I’m at a place where I'd like to meet someone and have a child,” Ms. Furlong told The Epoch Times. “A huge factor is: Did you get the vaccine or not?”

    Other social mixers, dubbed “pure blood parties,” are also planned in Canada, New York City, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.



    “These unvaccinated mixers are starting to pop up everywhere,” said Shelby Hosana, 28, who launched Unjected.com in the spring of 2021 to bring the unvaccinated singles community together.



    She said a person’s COVID-19 vaccination status is “the biggest ice-breaker and deal-breaker in the modern dating world.”



    And it cuts both ways—vaccinated and unvaccinated alike.

    Many online dating sites, such as Tinder, Match, and Bumble, now include COVID-19 badges, stickers, and filters to help singles better navigate the post-pandemic landscape.



    “It’s the very first question asked in the dating scene for many,” Ms. Hosana told The Epoch Times. “Especially now that we can anticipate all vaccines on the market will be mRNA. It’s quite literally choosing partners who choose zero vaccination.”



    Jill Crosby, owner and founder of Conscious Singles, a dating site “for those who value freedom and sovereignty,” said that unvaccinated singles appear to be more concerned about dating within their group.



    “Many of our non-vaccinated members will only date other non-vaccinated members,” Ms. Crosby told The Epoch Times.



    However, vaccinated members are usually less likely to care whether a potential partner is vaccinated.



    In early 2022, a sufficient number of unvaccinated members asked to declare their vaccination status to aid them in finding other unvaccinated members.



    Ms. Crosby said Conscious Singles responded by creating unvaccinated and vaccinated badges to post on dating profiles.



    “Since then, we’ve had a close to equal number of members post a nonvaccinated or vaccinated badge on their profile,” she said, “and about the same amount of members [about 30 percent] selected ”prefer not to say.”



    The dating site also provides multiple-choice “Match Questions” in many categories and recently added, “Will you date someone who has been vaccinated?”



    Ms. Hosana said not long ago some dating sites banned profiles that required a person’s vaccination status.



    Moreover, the recent data point to a distinct social divide with online dating following the rollout of the Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson vaccines for COVID-19 in early 2021.



    A July 2022 Pew Research Center survey, found that nearly 25 percent thought it “very important” to include one’s COVID-19 vaccination status in a dating profile.

    On the other hand, nearly half (47 percent) said it was “somewhat important” for people to provide their vaccination status, according to the survey.



    The survey showed that roughly 9 percent of U.S. adults had used a dating site or app between 2021 and 2022.



    More telling was the partisan split in survey responses: According to the report, Democrats were “far more likely” than Republicans to say that vaccination status was “important for them to see.”



    In Las Vegas, Ms. Hosana said she was curious to learn about what other people thought about dating and COVID-19 vaccination status.



    So she and her marketing director, Scott Armstrong, conducted a random “man on the street” survey that asked people whether they would date a vaccinated or unvaccinated person.



    “Some [vaccinated] people said they would never date an unvaccinated person—someone as ’stupid' as an anti-vaxxer,” Ms. Hosana said.



    “It’s going both ways,” she said. “They don’t want to be with us. And we really don’t want to be with them.”



    “To me, it’s like the first question they ask—did you take the COVID shots?” Mr. Armstrong told The Epoch Times about online dating.



    “It’s sad, too,” he said, to think that a man or a woman rejected as a potential dating partner over their vaccination status could have been “the one.”



    “It’s tough [but] this is the world we’re living in now,” he said.



    And, given the number of vaccinated people versus the unvaccinated, singles who have not taken one or more COVID-19 shots appear to be at a disadvantage, Ms. Hosana said.



    According to USAFacts, more than 270 million Americans (81 percent of the U.S. population) have received at least one COVID-19 injection; more than 230 million (70 percent) are considered fully vaccinated.



    The website added that of the roughly 1 billion doses distributed since 2020, more than 676 million (68 percent) doses were used nationwide, with almost 64 percent reported as fully vaccinated in Arizona.

    As new strains of the virus develop, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that people should receive an updated 2024–25 COVID-19 and flu vaccine for the fall and winter seasons.



    Among unvaccinated singles, the CDC’s advice falls on unwelcome ears.

    “It’s a whole new wild navigation in the world,” Ms. Hosana said.

    “Of course, the desire to match with someone who also is aligned with protecting personal freedoms is paramount. But the need to protect reproductive health and overall health has been the biggest concern since day one,” she said.



    Kristen Feuerstein, 58, and her friend Melanie Dias, 54, are both Phoenix residents who attended the July 15 social mixer hoping to connect with like-minded people.



    As unvaccinated health care workers, both women are divorced, single, and currently dating vaccinated men.



    Ms. Feuerstein said she is trying to make her relationship work despite her concerns about the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines and alleged spin-off effects, like spike protein “shedding.”



    She said her biggest fear is “investing” in a relationship in which her partner gets sick with the vaccine down the road.



    Overall, her COVID-19 vaccination status has “really niched me down” in terms of charting a dating course, she said.



    “Such trippy days,” Ms. Feuerstein said. “I’ve actually given up [on internet dating]. It’s just made dating really challenging.”



    Ms. Dias said her goal is to seek out other people who are “on the same page” as herself regarding the mRNA vaccines and who “see the world the same as you.”



    “At my age, I don’t want to invest time and energy in somebody who’s going to keel over,” she said jokingly.



    The vaccinated man she’s now seeing is someone from her past. During the pandemic, her friend had assured her that he would not be taking the injection.



    “We met up again last year,” Ms. Dias told The Epoch Times. “I assumed he didn’t get it. But he didn’t tell me [he received it] until we were already dating”—just “one” shot, she said, “but it was a tough call.”



    “It was the only way he could fly into Chicago to visit his family. He visits his family every year. What am I going to say to that? Don’t see your aging parents?” Ms. Dias said.



    John Ahlgren, 40, of Phoenix, said his plan at the social mixer was to meet other unvaccinated people and “have a good time.”



    “For dating, I don’t know if [taking the vaccine] is a deal-breaker,” he said, “but when I find someone, I want to spend the rest of my life with them.”



    “It’s just that the culture has changed. COVID certainly had a part to play in it. Social media has changed the landscape too,” Mr. Ahlgren told The Epoch Times.



    Being single, he said he prefers face-to-face “organic engagements” with people and views online dating as a “big waste of time.”



    Would you date a vaccinated person?



    “Not fully vaxxed,” Mr. Ahlgren said. “Once [vaxxed] twice shy, I guess.”



    Mike, 45, of Scottsdale, said he wasn’t expecting to meet the unvaccinated woman of his dreams on July 15, but he was open to the possibility.



    Unvaccinated single Bradley Ahlgren said he hoped to meet like-minded people during a social gathering of the unvaccinated in Phoenix, Ariz., on July 15, 2024. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)

    Unvaccinated single Bradley Ahlgren said he hoped to meet like-minded people during a social gathering of the unvaccinated in Phoenix, Ariz., on July 15, 2024. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)

    “That’s what this whole thing is pretty much about,” he said. “It’s about people who don’t want to meet someone vaccinated.”



    Ms. Furlong said the natural choice is to be with someone whose morals and values align with her own.



    “When I told one of my best friends I wasn’t getting [vaccinated]—he’s had five boosters—well, he said if you don’t get your vaccine, you’re never going to meet my parents,” Ms. Furlong said.



    “I feel like I’m the only person out of 20 people in my family who didn’t get injected. My parents said they only did it because they felt pressured.”



    Ms. Dias said she intends to “stay present” in her current relationship, as she is a romantic at heart.



    “They say it’s better to have loved than not at all—and if a person is really kind—you know what I mean,” she said.



    Allan Stein

    Author
    Allan Stein is a national reporter for The Epoch Times based in Arizona.

    If only it were all so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?

    ― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #6 on: July 22, 2024, 08:34:55 AM »
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  • Dating Divide Over Vaccination Status Splits Those Looking for a Partner

    [color=rgb(38 38 38/var(--tw-text-opacity))]‘Pure blood’ parties becoming a thing for unvaccinated singles in the post-pandemic dating world.


    [/font][/size][/color]


    Allan Stein

    By Allan Stein

    7/21/2024

    Updated:

    7/21/2024



    PHOENIX—Courtney Furlong, 36, had always considered modern dating a hit-or-miss prospect, even before COVID-19 vaccines, masks, and lockdowns turned the world upside down.



    But today, Ms. Furlong said it’s downright “terrible” trying to find a suitable dating partner who isn’t vaccinated.



    Having chosen to avoid taking the COVID-19 shots over concerns about their safety, the Phoenix resident now finds the dating market more restricted and challenging than ever.

    She said that many vaccinated people refuse to date the unvaccinated, and vice versa.



    “I’m at the age now where I want to have children. My situation now is, who should I have a baby with?” Ms. Furlong said, standing at the vegan bar at The Giving Tree in Phoenix, watching 50 other unvaccinated people mix and mingle on a hot Monday evening.



    Who knows? Tonight could be the night she'll meet her significant other, she said—or at least make new like-minded friends.

    “I’m at a place where I'd like to meet someone and have a child,” Ms. Furlong told The Epoch Times. “A huge factor is: Did you get the vaccine or not?”

    Other social mixers, dubbed “pure blood parties,” are also planned in Canada, New York City, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.



    “These unvaccinated mixers are starting to pop up everywhere,” said Shelby Hosana, 28, who launched Unjected.com in the spring of 2021 to bring the unvaccinated singles community together.



    She said a person’s COVID-19 vaccination status is “the biggest ice-breaker and deal-breaker in the modern dating world.”



    And it cuts both ways—vaccinated and unvaccinated alike.

    Many online dating sites, such as Tinder, Match, and Bumble, now include COVID-19 badges, stickers, and filters to help singles better navigate the post-pandemic landscape.



    “It’s the very first question asked in the dating scene for many,” Ms. Hosana told The Epoch Times. “Especially now that we can anticipate all vaccines on the market will be mRNA. It’s quite literally choosing partners who choose zero vaccination.”



    Jill Crosby, owner and founder of Conscious Singles, a dating site “for those who value freedom and sovereignty,” said that unvaccinated singles appear to be more concerned about dating within their group.



    “Many of our non-vaccinated members will only date other non-vaccinated members,” Ms. Crosby told The Epoch Times.



    However, vaccinated members are usually less likely to care whether a potential partner is vaccinated.



    In early 2022, a sufficient number of unvaccinated members asked to declare their vaccination status to aid them in finding other unvaccinated members.



    Ms. Crosby said Conscious Singles responded by creating unvaccinated and vaccinated badges to post on dating profiles.



    “Since then, we’ve had a close to equal number of members post a nonvaccinated or vaccinated badge on their profile,” she said, “and about the same amount of members [about 30 percent] selected ”prefer not to say.”



    The dating site also provides multiple-choice “Match Questions” in many categories and recently added, “Will you date someone who has been vaccinated?”



    Ms. Hosana said not long ago some dating sites banned profiles that required a person’s vaccination status.



    Moreover, the recent data point to a distinct social divide with online dating following the rollout of the Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson vaccines for COVID-19 in early 2021.



    A July 2022 Pew Research Center survey, found that nearly 25 percent thought it “very important” to include one’s COVID-19 vaccination status in a dating profile.

    On the other hand, nearly half (47 percent) said it was “somewhat important” for people to provide their vaccination status, according to the survey.



    The survey showed that roughly 9 percent of U.S. adults had used a dating site or app between 2021 and 2022.



    More telling was the partisan split in survey responses: According to the report, Democrats were “far more likely” than Republicans to say that vaccination status was “important for them to see.”



    In Las Vegas, Ms. Hosana said she was curious to learn about what other people thought about dating and COVID-19 vaccination status.



    So she and her marketing director, Scott Armstrong, conducted a random “man on the street” survey that asked people whether they would date a vaccinated or unvaccinated person.



    “Some [vaccinated] people said they would never date an unvaccinated person—someone as ’stupid' as an anti-vaxxer,” Ms. Hosana said.



    “It’s going both ways,” she said. “They don’t want to be with us. And we really don’t want to be with them.”



    “To me, it’s like the first question they ask—did you take the COVID shots?” Mr. Armstrong told The Epoch Times about online dating.



    “It’s sad, too,” he said, to think that a man or a woman rejected as a potential dating partner over their vaccination status could have been “the one.”



    “It’s tough [but] this is the world we’re living in now,” he said.



    And, given the number of vaccinated people versus the unvaccinated, singles who have not taken one or more COVID-19 shots appear to be at a disadvantage, Ms. Hosana said.



    According to USAFacts, more than 270 million Americans (81 percent of the U.S. population) have received at least one COVID-19 injection; more than 230 million (70 percent) are considered fully vaccinated.



    The website added that of the roughly 1 billion doses distributed since 2020, more than 676 million (68 percent) doses were used nationwide, with almost 64 percent reported as fully vaccinated in Arizona.

    As new strains of the virus develop, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that people should receive an updated 2024–25 COVID-19 and flu vaccine for the fall and winter seasons.



    Among unvaccinated singles, the CDC’s advice falls on unwelcome ears.

    “It’s a whole new wild navigation in the world,” Ms. Hosana said.

    “Of course, the desire to match with someone who also is aligned with protecting personal freedoms is paramount. But the need to protect reproductive health and overall health has been the biggest concern since day one,” she said.



    Kristen Feuerstein, 58, and her friend Melanie Dias, 54, are both Phoenix residents who attended the July 15 social mixer hoping to connect with like-minded people.



    As unvaccinated health care workers, both women are divorced, single, and currently dating vaccinated men.



    Ms. Feuerstein said she is trying to make her relationship work despite her concerns about the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines and alleged spin-off effects, like spike protein “shedding.”



    She said her biggest fear is “investing” in a relationship in which her partner gets sick with the vaccine down the road.



    Overall, her COVID-19 vaccination status has “really niched me down” in terms of charting a dating course, she said.



    “Such trippy days,” Ms. Feuerstein said. “I’ve actually given up [on internet dating]. It’s just made dating really challenging.”



    Ms. Dias said her goal is to seek out other people who are “on the same page” as herself regarding the mRNA vaccines and who “see the world the same as you.”



    “At my age, I don’t want to invest time and energy in somebody who’s going to keel over,” she said jokingly.



    The vaccinated man she’s now seeing is someone from her past. During the pandemic, her friend had assured her that he would not be taking the injection.



    “We met up again last year,” Ms. Dias told The Epoch Times. “I assumed he didn’t get it. But he didn’t tell me [he received it] until we were already dating”—just “one” shot, she said, “but it was a tough call.”



    “It was the only way he could fly into Chicago to visit his family. He visits his family every year. What am I going to say to that? Don’t see your aging parents?” Ms. Dias said.



    John Ahlgren, 40, of Phoenix, said his plan at the social mixer was to meet other unvaccinated people and “have a good time.”



    “For dating, I don’t know if [taking the vaccine] is a deal-breaker,” he said, “but when I find someone, I want to spend the rest of my life with them.”



    “It’s just that the culture has changed. COVID certainly had a part to play in it. Social media has changed the landscape too,” Mr. Ahlgren told The Epoch Times.



    Being single, he said he prefers face-to-face “organic engagements” with people and views online dating as a “big waste of time.”



    Would you date a vaccinated person?



    “Not fully vaxxed,” Mr. Ahlgren said. “Once [vaxxed] twice shy, I guess.”



    Mike, 45, of Scottsdale, said he wasn’t expecting to meet the unvaccinated woman of his dreams on July 15, but he was open to the possibility.



    Unvaccinated single Bradley Ahlgren said he hoped to meet like-minded people during a social gathering of the unvaccinated in Phoenix, Ariz., on July 15, 2024. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)

    Unvaccinated single Bradley Ahlgren said he hoped to meet like-minded people during a social gathering of the unvaccinated in Phoenix, Ariz., on July 15, 2024. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)

    “That’s what this whole thing is pretty much about,” he said. “It’s about people who don’t want to meet someone vaccinated.”



    Ms. Furlong said the natural choice is to be with someone whose morals and values align with her own.



    “When I told one of my best friends I wasn’t getting [vaccinated]—he’s had five boosters—well, he said if you don’t get your vaccine, you’re never going to meet my parents,” Ms. Furlong said.



    “I feel like I’m the only person out of 20 people in my family who didn’t get injected. My parents said they only did it because they felt pressured.”



    Ms. Dias said she intends to “stay present” in her current relationship, as she is a romantic at heart.



    “They say it’s better to have loved than not at all—and if a person is really kind—you know what I mean,” she said.



    Allan Stein

    Author
    Allan Stein is a national reporter for The Epoch Times based in Arizona.

    Looking at have children at 36... Ladies it's not ideal to wait this long. She could have had children 20 years earlier.

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #7 on: July 22, 2024, 12:09:53 PM »
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  • Within traditional Catholic circles, there are plenty of lepers posing as pure bloods or didn’t know any better and were poisoned.    


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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #8 on: July 22, 2024, 08:51:21 PM »
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  • What happened to the mandatory blood tests before marriage?!  STD's can hide symptoms in men. Once the lady gets std, she has symptoms,  she will know who gave it to her, if she is being chaste til marriage. This is possible. So, would it not be easier to just say, will you do a blood test, to both partners, wishing to marry. It should be mandatory.  Why isn't it!?

    Is it possible to check blood to see if someone had the jab?!

    Offline songbird

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #9 on: July 22, 2024, 08:51:47 PM »
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  • Above post by songbird

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #10 on: July 22, 2024, 11:24:57 PM »
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  • Here's a question, and I don't mean this maliciously: Why are we still talking about the Covid vaccine? People took it four years ago and it left their bloodstream... four years ago.

    I propose those who still obsess over it have their internet shut off so they can go outside.


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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #11 on: July 23, 2024, 12:53:45 AM »
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  • Here's a question, and I don't mean this maliciously: Why are we still talking about the Covid vaccine? People took it four years ago and it left their bloodstream... four years ago.

    I propose those who still obsess over it have their internet shut off so they can go outside.
    Are you trolling? The injection alters your DNA so that you constantly produce spike proteins forever, which in turns screws up your immune system. Also allegedly some batches contained stuff that alters DNA in regards to fertility, and this altered DNA can be passed on to children.

    So if I being unvaxxed married a vaxxed women, then our children would be carriers for the altered DNA. And if they have children with vaxxed or carriers their children would have the gene expression, while if they had children with an unvaxxed their children would be carriers. Do you see the problem?

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #12 on: July 23, 2024, 01:06:41 AM »
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  • Are you trolling? The injection alters your DNA so that you constantly produce spike proteins forever, which in turns screws up your immune system. Also allegedly some batches contained stuff that alters DNA in regards to fertility, and this altered DNA can be passed on to children.

    So if I being unvaxxed married a vaxxed women, then our children would be carriers for the altered DNA. And if they have children with vaxxed or carriers their children would have the gene expression, while if they had children with an unvaxxed their children would be carriers. Do you see the problem?

    "The COVID-19 mRNA vaccine is usually injected into the muscle of your upper arm so it can start doing its job. Once the spike protein is created, the contents of the vaccine are eliminated from your body in about two days. The actual mRNA content never enters your cells where your DNA is located. That is why it is impossible to alter your DNA with mRNA vaccines."

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #13 on: July 23, 2024, 01:07:40 AM »
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  • The main problem with the Covid vaccine is that it didn't do its job. For all that it was propped up to be, it did very little against Covid.

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    Re: The Purebloods and the Lepers.
    « Reply #14 on: July 23, 2024, 05:44:48 AM »
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  • "The COVID-19 mRNA vaccine is usually injected into the muscle of your upper arm so it can start doing its job. Once the spike protein is created, the contents of the vaccine are eliminated from your body in about two days. The actual mRNA content never enters your cells where your DNA is located. That is why it is impossible to alter your DNA with mRNA vaccines."
    That's a lie that's been long since disproven.