Experts warn against mRNA jabs for toddlers
Yesterday, Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration approved the Moderna mRNA jab for children under five. That's despite a plethora of experts cautioning against such a move.
Dear friend,
Yesterday, Australia’s Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) — which is the equivalent of the United States’ Food and Drug Administration — approved the paediatric use of Moderna’s so-called ‘vaccine’ in young children aged six months to five years.
This decision follows the recent approval of this experimental mRNA gene therapy for the same cohort of young children in the USA.
In an eerie coincidence, yesterday’s edition of Nation First focussed on known deaths and serious injuries from the jab in toddlers that have come out of the USA… on the same day that the TGA approved the so-called ‘vaccine’ for under fives in Australia.
Read yesterday’s edition of Nation First here:
The Moderna jab has one final hurdle in to clear Australia.
A decision still has to be made by the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI) as to whether or not the Moderna product is to be made publicly available for toddlers.
However, there’s been little pushback by ATAGI in regards to using the mRNA shots on other age groups where it’s been known that there a large number of serious adverse events.
For instance, ATAGI should have known that myocarditis was a common adverse event in the teenage cohort prior to approval of the jab for that age group.
They should have known that boys and girls in the USA had died suddenly from the jab before that approval.
They should have known that a teenage girl who was in the Pfizer clinical trials suffered a debilitating condition because of the jab which she hasn’t recovered from.
Yet ATAGI approved the mRNA jabs for the teen cohort anyway. Will it be any different with the toddler cohort?
There are a plethora of leading experts around the world who would advise ATAGI not to proceed with approving mRNA injections for toddlers.
Today, Nation First features those experts. Here’s hoping ATAGI listens to what they’ve said.
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