Recent Posts

Vaccine Injury Stories

Science Is Unsettling

Shop

Health News, Pregnancy, Vaccines

COVID-19 Vaccine and Infertility

Former vice president of Pfizer, Dr. Michael Yeadon raised concerns that COVID-19 vaccines may impair fertility, and has petitioned the European regulator along with Dr. Wodarg for an immediate halt of the vaccines.

Dr. Yeadon and Dr. Wodarg state that the mRNA shot codes for the spike protein which contains syncytin-homologous proteins and that there is potential for the immune system to develop a response against syncytin-1 which is a protein that is fundamental for the formation of a placenta.

He states if this happens a woman could become “infertile indefinitely”.

Yeadon says the trials have not addressed this concern at all and so while there is no evidence this would happen he says there is equally no evidence that it wouldn’t, and the onus is on the manufacturer to rule this out before vaccinating millions of women worldwide. They have literally no data on this.

Many articles have attempted to “debunk” this claim, however they use “strawman arguments.” For instance it takes an article which misquotes Yeadon in the headline arguing against things he never said.

It then brings in a microbiologist to patronizingly explain that the shot doesn’t inject viral proteins but rather mRNA … but nobody is claiming otherwise… it mentions the term conspiracy theorist in the second paragraph.

It’s all designed to smear Yeadon as a lunatic, whereas he was the head of research and development for Pfizer for many years so there can be few people in the world better qualified to speak about this topic.

He himself stated that there’s no evidence it would cause infertility, but equally there is no evidence it wouldn’t. Yet the article falsely targets him for claiming that it would.

How Would COVID-19 Vaccine Cause Infertility?

The vaccinations are expected to raise antibodies against the spike proteins of SARS-CoV-2. However, spike proteins also contain syncytin-homologous proteins, which are essential for the formation of the placenta in mammals such as humans.

It must be absolutely excluded that a vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 triggers an immune reaction against syncytin-1, as otherwise infertility of indefinite duration in vaccinated women could result.

Watch Dr. Simone Gold discuss information about COVID-19 vaccines that you may not have heard:

Written by

387   Posts

View All Posts
Follow Me :

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *