Information is everywhere. You can search for anything anytime and anywhere. I think this is both hugely helpful and also detrimental because it can be very challenging to actually find what is true.
A perfect example of this is the work of Ian Tizard, BVMS, PhD, ACVM, ScD. He is also a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Microbiologists and a Distinguished Professor at Texas A&M University. I originally came across his name from an article I read, titled "Lifelong Immunity - Why Vets are Pushing Back," from Dogs Naturally magazine online, which generally I am a huge fan of and honestly, took their word for it when it came to Ian Tizard validating the work of Ronald Schultz, DVM, who researched and proved that "vaccines for diseases like distemper and canine parvovirus, once administered to adult animals, provide lifetime immunity."
However, upon further research on Ian Tizard, Sahara and I found several of his papers, all published after 2020 that don't make a lot of sense. For example, in his paper, "Adverse Consequences of Vaccines," he discusses the importance of vaccines as they "greatly exceed any risk from the procedure," are "overwhelmingly beneficial" and "adverse events associated with vaccination that might compromise the health of an animal are usually rare, mild and transient."
He then contradicts himself by stating vaccines are not risk-free and lists and healthy animals can have allergic reactions, neurological complications and could negatively impact a fetus. He continues to caution vets to look carefully at vaccinating the same dose to all dogs regardless of size because the prevalence of adverse vaccine reactions in young, small-breed, neutered dogs has increased.
In another publication, "Vaccinations Against Coronavirus in Domestic Animals," he emphasizes the importance of vaccinating repeatedly to prevent Covid-19 spreading in livestock because the virus "undergoes frequent genetic shifts and as a result, can only be controlled by extensive and repeated vaccination." I am not anti-vaccine. I am anti-unnecessary vaccines. When a SCIENTIST advocates for repeated vaccination without titer antibody testing first, I begin to question their ethics. Information is everywhere. Just because a scientist says it, doesn't make it true.
After reading this, I did a basic google search: "Ian Tizard" and "Pfizer." He appears in 2020, at the start of the pandemic. By 2021, Texas A&M partnered with the Environmental Education & Rural Health (PEER) Program to improve Covid-19 vaccine rates in rural Texas populations. They received a Science Education Partnership Award (SEPA) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institute of Health, which is sponsored by Pfizer.
In 2021, Pfizer made $81.3 billion, double its revenue in 2020. In 2022, Pfizer made $100 billion. For 2023, Pfizer projected to make between $58 billion to $61 billion. That is an insane amount of money. Pfizer's board of directors made a whole lot of money off of vaccines that were pushed by scientists like Ian Tizard. Ian Tizard appears in 2020, he is not on LinkedIn and very little information can actually be found about his current position. Perhaps he is a plant?
Since vaccines are administered on a "one size fits all" basis, without titer antibody testing first, I think it is possible that scientists like Ian Tizard receive a profit from vaccines. We know that Pfizer sponsors the NIH, which is entirely unethical and think it is very possible that they are paying incentives to scientists to control the vaccine aka moneymaking narrative. Maybe his work has been planted online as total propaganda.
Information is everywhere and it can be difficult to know what the truth actually is. When it comes to vaccines of any kind, always, always titer first no matter what anyone says.
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