When you hear a vaccine described as ‘effective’, this is what it really means
While we’re on the topic of vaccines, I just discovered something very important.
When you hear that a vaccine is “effective” of course you think that “effective” means it will prevent a disease or illness.
What else could it mean?
Well, get ready for the real definition.
Vaccine expert Dr. Sherri Tenpenny explains it like this…
“What always comes out is that vaccines are ‘safe’ and ‘effective.’ It took me a while to figure out what that word ‘effective’ really even meant,” she said.
When patients and parents and even doctors hear the word, said Dr. Tenpenny, “they assume that vaccines will keep you from getting sick.”
But as Dr. Tenpenny “dug deeper” into scientific research, she came to the shocking realization that “effective” really means something else.
It means that when a vaccine is injected into you, it creates an antibody. So if that shot causes an antibody response, then “science says that vaccine is ‘effective.’ It did what it was supposed to do,” she said.
And here’s how they trick us, because if we think “antibody” and “protection” mean the same thing, they don’t. Dr. Tenpenny calls that “a leap in assumption.”
So when you see that word “effective” being parroted by the press, don’t think that automatically means you’re protected.
Because that word, like the vaccines themselves, is just a shot in the dark.
Sources:
“Vaccine’s safety: A crime against humanity” Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, Gary Null , youtube.com


