Rational, objective information and debate surrounding the efficacy of vaccines is hard to find, especially with the immense amount of censorship that has permeated our society during the Covid-19 pandemic. Experts who have challenged the prevailing narrative on Covid-19 vaccines have been systematically censored by government regulators, intelligence agencies, social media giants, the mainstream media, and other actors. In tandem, this has created an extraordinary environment of self-censorship, with many fearing to speak out due to real and perceived negative consequences, including becoming a potential social pariah at the hands of our ever-escalating “cancel culture.”
For instance, YouTube just pulled down a recent interview between Jordan Peterson and presidential candidate Robert Kennedy Jr. Since we can no longer gain accurate and objective information from the internet due to mass-censorship, it is more important than ever that we turn to books for our own edification as to the reality behind vaccines, Covid-19 and otherwise.
To that end, below is a beginner’s reading list on the subject, with books covering:
- The questionable safety of vaccines, the liability protections that shield vaccine manufacturers, and the federal government’s vaccine injury compensation fund
- The nonsensical “universal” vaccination plan rolled out during Covid-19 and an analysis comparing the potential risk from the vaccine versus risk from the disease itself
- The dubious claim that vaccines have saved millions of lives (hint: they haven’t)
- The epidemic of autoimmune diseases that has been triggered by mass vaccination campaigns
- The comparison of potential risk from a vaccine compared to potential risk from the disease itself
- The highly uncertain prevailing narrative that vaccines eradicated polio
- The CDC’s adjustment of the child vaccination schedule in 1989 and the correlated explosion of individuals with peanut allergies
- The lies about vaccines that have been pumped into us by the public health cartel, Big Pharma, and pediatricians (written specifically for worried parents)
- Finally, what parents should do when their child gets sick, and how to effectively prepare for it
This list can also be found here.