Natural Immunity
Medical professionals and colleges have known since the very beginning that naturally acquired immunity is far superior to anything the pharmaceutical industry has ever been able to create, or likely to develop, with vaccines.
One reason for this is that a very large part of the immune system resides in the lymphatic tissues surrounding the intestines, lungs, nasal passages, and other membranes exposed to the external environment. These lymphatics are integral to programming the immune system to recognize invaders that are likely to attack the body from those locations.
But when you inject a vaccine into the body, those areas are bypassed, preventing the immune system from activating its first line of defense from the most likely areas of attack. Once invaders gain access into deeper parts of the body, different components of the immune system take over.
So you could probably argue that injectable vaccines might work best against germs that enter your body directly via puncture wounds such as tetanus and rabies, but that wouldn't apply to diseases such as COVID, influenza, or RSV. In those cases, relying only on the back-up immune system to fight off the disease would be roughly analagous to a person who is just beginning to experience COVID symptoms being told to just go home and wait until his condition deteriorates to the point that he needs to rushed to the hospital Intensive Care Unit to be attached to a ventilator.
That wouldn't make much sense for something that's easily treatable in the early stages, would it?
See also: CDC Trampling Rights (without any justification)
Johns Hopkins Study: This study found that natural COVID immunity lasts at least 650 days, with no noticeable decline. | |
Israeli Study on Immunity: A very large Israeli study finds that natural immunity offers far more protection from COVID disease than the 'vaccines'. | |
81 Research Studies: A list of some of the most robust scientific studies that show the superiority of natural immunity over anything induced by COVID vaccines. |