Florida issues COVID 19 guidance: No mRNA covid shots

Mark today, Friday the 13th, down as the day the “safe and effective” lie suffered a fatal head injury. Yesterday, Florida’s Department of Health issued its Fall covid season guidance, headlined “Updated Guidance for COVID-19 Boosters for the Fall and Winter 2024–2025 Season.” It advised Florida doctors against giving mRNA covid shots to anybody, not even medical fetishists:

Boom. The FDOH continued by listing seven different categories of safety and efficacy concerns, including things like negative efficacy (i.e., making patients more likely to get covid), increased risk of an autoimmune disease, myocarditis, persistence of mRNA spike protein in the body (i.e., long covid), and coarse, unwanted body hair growing in the most inconvenient spots.

Okay, maybe not the hair thing. But all the rest! And each category provided hyperlinks to scientific studies, so that the media will shut up this time and have to keep its stupid “no evidence” dance routine in the box.

And the media is shutting up. Despite its revolutionary conclusions, there was not a single story in corporate media anywhere. Not even a critical story. Not even a story rounding up ‘covid experts’ to call it misinformation. Not even a fact-check. You’d think at least the Miami Herald would have had a go, but nope.

The media is terrified that mRNA sales might slip even more.

A year ago last September, Florida’s outstanding Surgeon General Joe Ladapo advised against mRNA vaccines in anyone under 65. Yesterday, the Florida Department of Health —one of the largest state-level public health agencies in the country— became the very first government health agency in the world to advise against the shots regardless of age.

Florida’s Department of Health advisories have the legal effect of setting the “Standard of Care” in the Sunshine State. Providers who stray from the standard of care risk potential civil liability and medical board review.

Anyway, so much for “safe and effective.” Let’s move on!

So … when do the trials start?

EOMC Editor

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