Dr. Byram Bridle, associate professor of viral immunology at the University of Guelph: You typically don’t give somebody who’s pregnant anything that’s pro-inflammatory That’s just kind of a general rule of thumb

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Our society of gynecologists and obstetricians in Canada have officially published a statement encouraging pregnant females to be vaccinated and I just don’t understand this

Pfizer like all the companies recognize you do not go into this population without proper safety testing

They have already start initiated phase three clinical trials

so kudos to them that’s the proper way to go about it right

first you’re on the proper well-monitored very closely monitored you know safety trials and if all looks good that’s great

you want some long-term data especially in that demographic because how about the the children?

we would like to see hey there’s normal birth and that they haven’t had any damage or harm caused right

the messenger rna vaccines are highly reactogenic meaning they tend to be quite pro-inflammatory

there’s many cases where people can’t lift their arm afterwards because there’s so much inflammation there

you typically don’t give somebody who’s pregnant anything that’s pro-inflammatory

that’s just kind of a general rule of thumb

secondly we’re concerned if there’s some kind of damage being done to blood vessels that is causing uterine bleeding

that’s at the interface of the placenta right

If there’s a pregnant individual then there’s potential other safety concerns

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@ 47:05

47:05
with your listeners all right so nobody
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out there is telling you about bleeding
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disorders
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but i have been looking at this and many
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other scientists have if this biology is
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true
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one of two things happen when these when
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when the spike protein binds to the
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the platelets they either clump and you
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get the clotting and this is
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acknowledged or as i said
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they get removed and you get low
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platelet counts and that could be
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associated with bleeding
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so don’t take my word like oh
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so put me to the test i am predicting
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that at some point
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in the relatively near future who knows
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when these vaccines will all become
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associated with bleeding disorders as
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well
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and in fact people want to do some
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things in fact your listeners your
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listeners can help contribute to this
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if you’ve been vaccinated what you have
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to understand is it’s very important for
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any adverse events to be reported now
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this is one that’s actually been largely
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written off um
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the bleeding disorders what we’re
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finding is uh this is being
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really underreported and one of the
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places where bleeding is occurring
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uh actually very commonly well i guess
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not very commonly but commonly enough
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in women is vaginal bleeding so one of
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the areas where the the vasculature
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seems to be affected is in the uterus
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and when you think about it we’ve been
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rolling this out from older individuals
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and going on down
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so any older woman right who’s been uh
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vaccinated and might think that there’s
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some
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unusual vaginal bleeding that doesn’t
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correlate with their typical timing of
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their cycle
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i mean they get written off as you know
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abnormal cycling is very normal right in
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an older female
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but but we’re also seeing this in
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younger females because the other group
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that’s been vaccinated was prioritized
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were frontline workers
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uh and and uh and interestingly there’s
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actually a group of
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of young women in africa who through
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social media started to identify right
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they they
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many of them had very regular cycles
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we’re getting i got the vaccine and then
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had
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this unexpected vaginal bleeding and the
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numbers that are now coming forward are
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quite large
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there’s two things that keep keep
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women from from doing this often one is
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maybe just embarrassment and not wanting
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to
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disclose that type of information the
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second one is
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uh that it can it has been it can be
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written off relatively easily by the
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medical community as just
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a one-off you know oddity in their and
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their menstrual cycle
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but i would encourage if anybody who’s
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listening to this has had a vaccine and
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found that they had any evidence of
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vaginal bleeding at a time that they
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would not expect
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it is very important to report these
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kind of things because this is going to
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help others this is going to help us
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understand this
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and one of the reasons why i’m
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particularly concerned about this
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evidence of
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vaginal bleeding uh unexpected is
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this i can’t even believe right our our
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society
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of gynecologists and obstetricians in
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canada
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have officially published a statement
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encouraging
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pregnant females to be vaccinated and
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again i
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i i just understand this so fisa
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like all the companies recognize you do
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not go into this population
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without proper safety testing they have
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already start initiated phase three
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clinical trials
50:17
so kudos to them that’s the proper way
50:19
to go about it right
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first you’re on the proper
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well-monitored very closely monitored
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you know safety trials and if all looks
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good that’s great
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and my good you want some long-term data
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especially in that demographic because
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how about the the children like if we
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would like to see hey there’s normal
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birth and
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a and and that they haven’t had any
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damage or harm caused right
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and so when you see this you first of
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all
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like the messenger rna vaccines are
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highly reactogenic
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meaning they they tend to be quite
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pro-inflammatory that’s why
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people have to get the vaccines in their
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arms there’s many cases where people
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can’t lift their arm afterwards because
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there’s so much inflammation there
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you typically don’t give somebody who’s
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pregnant anything that’s
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pro-inflammatory
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that’s just kind of a general uh rule of
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thumb and then secondly you know we’re
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concerned if
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there’s some kind of damage being done
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to blood vessels that is causing uterine
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bleeding
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uh for example right um that’s at the
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interface of the placenta
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right uh if if there’s a pregnant
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individual and then there’s potential
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other safety
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concerns so you see where i’m coming
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from when this i i’m
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the reason why i’m talking about this in
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the vaccines is i want your readers to
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be
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well aware that we’re not fools as
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scientists we actually if you sit there
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and you just follow the scientific
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literature as it builds
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it leads to logical questions and it
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leads to logical predictions
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and for us to see these logical
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predictions uh
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unveiling themselves as real-life
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safety issues that have resulted in
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people dying after vaccination
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right you can imagine there’s nothing
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more frustrating and then to continue to
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be able to demonstrate this history
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of scientists who can see these things
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coming being ignored
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and to still be ignored because our
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questions don’t stop there wayne we
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still have
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we have new questions and additional
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questions right and as a scientist i
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don’t want to see those coming true in
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the future

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One Response to “Dr. Byram Bridle, associate professor of viral immunology at the University of Guelph: You typically don’t give somebody who’s pregnant anything that’s pro-inflammatory That’s just kind of a general rule of thumb”

  1. rosettasister Says:

    Dr. Byram #Bridle, associate professor of viral immunology at the University of Guelph: You typically don’t give somebody who’s #pregnant anything that’s pro-inflammatory That’s just kind of a general rule of thumb

    Dr. Byram Bridle, associate professor of viral immunology at the University of Guelph: You typically don’t give somebody who’s pregnant anything that’s pro-inflammatory That’s just kind of a general rule of thumb

    #unido #VaccineMandate #VAERS #Tucker

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