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Covid surging in India?

Don't suppose that could have anything to do with *vaccination* surging there?

After a slow start w/vaccination and a considerable number of deaths early on (less where states were using IVM) the death rate was way down and a big percentage of the population had been exposed to the disease.

If I'm getting the timeline right, *then* they started really pushing the vax - to the point where 94% if the population is vaxxed, and by far the biggest share of those are with 'Covishield' AKA Astra-Zeneca.

As if Pfizer or Moderna weren't dangerous enough - A-Z is multiple times dangerous, no?

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I know there is evidence of immunological harm from the Pfizer and Moderna shots, and I know that all the COVID shots are positively correlated with a number of life threatening conditions. I can't recall seeing anything that makes A-Z demonstrably more dangerous, but I certainly wouldn't rule it out.

However, relative to earlier infection waves, India is hardly experiencing a "surge".

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I'll try to find who it was, but someone (Steve Kirsch, perhaps?) I regard as credible was saying recently they concluded that A-Z was 6-7 times more deadly than Pfizer or Moderna.

There has been some MSM acknowledgement of vaccine harms in the UK recently, but nearly all focused on A-Z. Some regard that as a sort of 'limited hangout' - singling out A-Z as dangerous in hope that they can get people to overlook broader vaccine harms.

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A-Z is the main inoculation used in the UK. Pfizer/Moderna are the primary ones here in the US.

There is one key distinction here: A-Z is a viral vector vaccine, much like Janssen.

I know that Janssen has not proven to be as dangerous as Pfizer/Moderna, although that may also be because its not as popular.

However, we should not get ahead of the data. Remember, India is having a "surge" in name only. So far this is not shaping up as an actual health crisis even by the terms of the Pandemic Panic Narrative.

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