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Health #76030 vaccine

Is it not recommended to take the covid vaccine or any other vaccine as well?

I had my three doses at the time. As if I hadn't done them, I was just as sick with covid. Now I won't do a fourth dose because I don't think it's probably necessary anyway.

Also because my aunt died from this vaccine thing, my grandfather got sick, etc. I'm not saying this to give you advice, my best advice is: "evaluate with your doctor if it's the case". But make sure you have a competent and non-Jewish doctor.

Mine was, he was truly competent (I have never found a doctor as compassionate and as brilliant and intuitive in the best ways to treat me, since he died of cancer) and he made fun of these "vaccines" (obviously he wasn't a conspiracy theorist who in the throes of delusions explained about "aborted fetuses in vaccines!!!11 The Nobel Prize candidate said it!111", he was a serious person who had his reasons for telling me what he told me against these vaccine thing).

As for the doctor, you'll know if he's competent. If you want to understand if he is Jewish, just consult these pdfs:



 
But make sure you have a competent and non-Jewish doctor.

Even if a doctor is non-jewish, he could lose his job if he went against the consensus. People somehow think it's just the doctor and can do whatever he wants, but doctors get intimidated by their higher ups.

There was a video where woman said that her husband's doctor told him that he couldn't give him an exception because he would be "investigated" if he did that (and that would probably lead to him losing his medical license).

Besides the fear of losing their jobs, most doctors are sheep because they have only been trained to use pharmaceuticals and vaccines and blindly believe these to be effective without doing any research by themselves. A doctor isn't a god.

This can be seen in many studies for example, where doctors were whether they would recommend chemotherapy to a patient. Over 90% answered yes. But when they were asked if they would recommend it to their family, only 52% answered yes. So it means that many doctors know that this is dangerous but are afraid to go against what they were told. The others could genuinely believe that is good because they are sheep.

I'm pretty sure if they asked them about vaccines instead of chemotherapy they would answer like that too.

So yes, it's better to research such things independently, despite what a doctor says.
 
So yes, it's better to research such things independently, despite what a doctor says.

It's a view to consider, but since I don't feel like giving medical advice because I saw a tiktok video, I think it's better to follow the opinion of a doctor, who I specified should be a non-Jew, but should also be a GOOD doctor. For example, mine really was, but when he passed away, I'm increasingly realizing that a good doctor is not the norm, but a blessing (I agree with you in this sense). And yes, personal research is very useful, but it should be done well (reliable sources such as serious textbooks, not "I saw a very convincing instagram reel").

It's not wise to fall backwards confident that someone will grab us because they're there, but neither is it wise to say: "mmh I can fall backwards without any worries because I saw the new TikTok trend that usually everyone gets grabbed, I don't even need to check if there's actually someone trustworthy behind me, in the 10-second videos on TikTok they didn't show this scene).

I can understand some doctors' distrust, but tarring everyone with the same brush and thinking that we shouldn't even listen with a modicum of interest to what a person with a 110 cum laude in Medicine tells us seems even less prudent to me, dear Brother. Generic speak of course.
 
Conventional vaccines are fine. Don't do the experimental ones they rushed out the door for covid.
 
It's a view to consider, but since I don't feel like giving medical advice because I saw a tiktok video, I think it's better to follow the opinion of a doctor, who I specified should be a non-Jew, but should also be a GOOD doctor. For example, mine really was, but when he passed away, I'm increasingly realizing that a good doctor is not the norm, but a blessing (I agree with you in this sense). And yes, personal research is very useful, but it should be done well (reliable sources such as serious textbooks, not "I saw a very convincing instagram reel").

It's not wise to fall backwards confident that someone will grab us because they're there, but neither is it wise to say: "mmh I can fall backwards without any worries because I saw the new TikTok trend that usually everyone gets grabbed, I don't even need to check if there's actually someone trustworthy behind me, in the 10-second videos on TikTok they didn't show this scene).

I can understand some doctors' distrust, but tarring everyone with the same brush and thinking that we shouldn't even listen with a modicum of interest to what a person with a 110 cum laude in Medicine tells us seems even less prudent to me, dear Brother. Generic speak of course.

The vaccine side effect data that is coming out, is all negative. At the time when the vaccine were rolling there was a lot of gaslighting of public. The conspiracy theorist were looking at the people behind the vaccines being evil and outright saying we need to depopulate the world. The official scientific narrative of time was all "safe and effective". Since then its been shown Pfizer, Moderna, etc. lied about the side effects in their short term studies because they were giving no liability and billions of dollar were at stake. There was a lot of fraud in the covid deaths data including double counting deaths to amp of the hysteria around the world. Fake stories of hospitals being fudge pack full of covid patients. So it wasn't hard to get good doctors to give bad advice due to all the gaslighting..

A good doctor can give bad advice. Peer review studies are better than Alex Jones/Tiktok for reference at the same time there whistle blowers using these platforms. Phd holders were the most hesitant demographic to get the vaccines.

Is it not recommended to take the covid vaccine or any other vaccine as well?

I wouldn't take anything experimental where the pharmaceutal companies have no liability. Doctors and pharmacies get a commisson for giving out vaccines in a lot of places. Do the research for each product individually and make a informed choice. Not all things are equal.
 
The vaccine side effect data that is coming out, is all negative. At the time when the vaccine were rolling there was a lot of gaslighting of public.

This is exactly what I say in my misunderstood reply. Only I said in it: "I understand this thing because a serious doctor explained it to me, not because I saw it on Facebook where a grandmother between one photo of an apple pie and another improvised as a virologist".

My doctor was a truly serious, competent and honest person, and if I understood the vaccine-bullshit it is thanks to him, not because I saw the video "flat earth, poisonous vaccines and your neighbor is a secret agent of the KGB?". Now it makes no sense to worry about this covid-bullshit. But it is the basic concept that still interests me.

We are Satanists because an enlightened (godlike) person like HPS Maxine Dietrich gave a good example (JoS is full of articles with her experiences and personal stories) and was visibly a great heroine destined for better things.

We are not what we are because we once came across a skinhead who told us "you know what? Long live Satan". The effects are the same, but the reasons for something are far more sincere if they have a more solid basis than "someone randomly said this, now it's true". If I say that the covid vaccines are bullshit, I can explain it in medical terms, not in Facebook dialectics.

That's all I was saying, I didn't say: "I recommend the annual double dose of vaccine for a disease that no one has known about for years, so in 50 years you will have had at least 100 more doses and this will do you good because a Jew said so".

Yes, you have to trust yourself first. But when you say "trust your head" you never mean "what do you think is true about how physics in the universe works? Please go by feeling". This is nothing different than throwing a couple of dice, your own dice, and seeing what comes out to make your best decision of the day.

Thinking with your head includes the whole part of doing research to support your natural spontaneous tendency. "I think it could be that vaccines are useless and harmful" is just a (correct) starting point. Making this our awareness concrete into something more serious than "even the guy selling roses on the street corner said that" is a more advanced part of the process. THAT'S ALL I meant.

The importance of this is not understood on stupid issues like a vaccine that makes no sense in 2025 for a distant bullshit in 2019, but when there are more serious issues to deal with, then the matter will be more evident.
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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