@TheOneyouwerewarnedabout You wouldn't know the truth if it jumped up and bit you in the ass. And no, I'm not obsessed with you. I have a problem with anybody who gets away with spreading dangerous lies in public places.
Don't be a sheep, @hippyjoe1955! Don't be swayed by "conventional wisdom"! Christopher Key has the answer for it's free!! Tons of research he says!!!
An Alabama anti-vaxxer recently arrested in Jefferson County is touting urine as a cure for COVID-19.
Christopher Key is the founder of “Vaccine Police,” a website that gathers anti-vax news across the internet.
Key posted a video to his Telegram account over the weekend, according to The Daily Beast, saying that the urine cure has been around for centuries.
There is no scientific evidence to support Key’s claim.
“The antidote that we have seen now, and we have tons and tons of research, is urine therapy,” Key said in the video. “I know to a lot of you this sounds crazy, but guys, God’s given us everything we need.”
@John69 Haha for now anyways ;) I had Moderna for the first two and Pfizer for the booster and the only side effect I have right now is a slightly bruised feeling arm.
@MarineBob I'm glad you're protected. Doctors are recommending that people who got the J&J shot get an mRNA booster (preferably Moderna; Pfizer is good too).
And before Omicron’s spread, early data from a federal clinical trial suggested it might be better for J&J one-shot recipients to get an mRNA vaccine booster. The trial’s preliminary data showed that people who had gotten the J&J vaccine followed by a Moderna booster had a 76-fold rise in antibodies in 15 days; those who got Pfizer saw a 35-fold increase; while those who got the J&J booster had only a fourfold increase. That data was published in a preprint and has not yet undergone independent peer review.