LETTER: What parents need to know about COVID jabs

To the editor:

Unsurprisingly, the FDA has approved an emergency use authorization (EUA) for COVID jabs for children as young as six months. Is that all parents “need to know” in order to make “informed consent” decisions for their children? The following should at least make for a partially-informed consent:

A non-peer-reviewed paper that supports the COVID jab for children under 5 years of age compared cumulative COVID-19 deaths from March 2020-April 2022 inclusive to other causes of deaths that occurred in 2019 only (COVID-19 deaths were not counted in 2019). The CDC used this false comparison in making their decision to recommend the jabs.

The FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee ignored pleas from experts, the vaccine-injured and a congressman representing 17 other lawmakers to delay authorization until safety questions could be addressed.

Efficacy (effectiveness) was not a requirement for approval, only the triggering of a measurable immune response. Despite campaigns promoting all jabs as “safe and effective,” the effectiveness is in truth, unknown.

Two senior members of the FDA resigned in protest over the pressure to approve earlier EUAs for COVID-19. The pressure to approve EUAs even before receiving trial data is apparently coming from the White House.

The COVID jab is being added to the 6-month well-baby vaccination, despite NO studies to determine if it is safe to co-administer with other vaccines.

The sample size of the baby/toddler trial was grossly inadequate (the Pfizer trial consisted of seven placebo and three vaccine subjects), and several test subjects in an earlier children’s study that developed medical conditions (febrile convulsions, anaphylactic shock, rashes in excess of seven days, fever leading to seizures, etc.) after receiving the jabs were removed from the study rather than recorded as “adverse reactions.”

As of May 19, 2022, there are 749,249 reports of injury or death from Pfizer jabs alone. These include tens of thousands of children who experienced anaphylaxis, myocarditis (mortality in newborn infants is as high as 75%, in older children 10-30%) pericarditis, seizures, fevers, rashes and death.

1,301,356 reports of adverse events following COVID-19 vaccines were submitted between Dec. 14, 2020, and June 10, 2022, to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS). This includes 1,739 adverse events, including 65 cases rated as serious and three reported deaths for 6-month to 5-year-old children.

Previous studies of VAERS suggest as little as 1% of vaccine injuries are even reported.

Wendy Goerl, Shawano

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