![]() ![]() She has no degree in immunology, she’s a former emergency physician who now makes a living selling anti-vaccine propaganda. She’s one of the 12 people that have been cited to spread about 65% of misinformation online around vaccines. Like that’s irony right there, right? So this person is held up as an expert. Despite advocating against masks and vaccines, her company, Tenpenny Integrative Health or something, took 72 grand in federal PPP paycheck protection money. She charges 600 and some odd dollars for a course to teach people how to persuade others not to take vaccines. She used to be a doctor, now she’s a professional anti-vaxxer. ![]() The first is that you have fake experts, so somebody like a Sherri Tenpenny who’s a professional anti-vaxxer. Now they’re saying something, they’re adding more incorrectness to this, they’re saying, “Well, but by now getting vaccinated, you’re producing, you’re teaching cells to produce spike protein,” this S-protein that comes from the coronavirus, so that we can then make antibodies to it to defend against natural coronavirus infection, and that “this dangerous spike protein leeches, sheds from the human body,” through magical means not otherwise specified because that’s actually doesn’t happen, “and then can get onto nearby women, which will then cause them to have all the ill effects of the spike protein.” Okay, just take a second and start to recognize, we’ll go through the science of it, start to recognize the signs of misinformation. We don’t see that, right? And so this idea was already incorrect. And it turns out that if it did, then getting natural coronavirus infection, which a third to a half of Americans have probably had, we would have masses of sterilization. But the sort of anti-vax crowd picked that up early on and were like, “Well, what about this? It’s gonna cause sterilization.” And then it turns out it didn’t. The similarities are like a tiny stretch of amino acids that have no functional similarity, in other words, the antibodies don’t bind to human syncytin, so it’s a nonsense thing. So why would they even say this? There was a piece of misinformation early on that I’ve debunked in a previous video, which I’ll link to in the show notes here, that said that the spike protein can cause miscarriages and sterility because it shares some structural similarities to a protein called syncytin-2 that exists in human mammalian placenta, and that by making antibodies that bind to the spike protein, we can make antibodies that bind to syncytin, which can then cause placental damage and miscarriage. The anti-vax people are usually like, “My body, my choice,” right? Unless you choose to be vaccinated, then you’re not getting a job here. And by the way, that’s incredibly discriminatory. Okay, let’s dig into why they’re saying this. They’re basically saying they will not hire any teacher who’s been vaccinated out of an abundance of caution because their advisors are saying that by being vaccinated, you are going to shed either vaccine or spike protein that the vaccine teaches your cells how to make, and that shedding can affect women around you who haven’t been vaccinated and cause them to miscarry, or have menstrual cycle abnormalities, or sterility, or early puberty in girls. There’s some private school in Miami called the Centner Academy, and I say its name because no one should ever go there. Let’s dig into this one because it has real world implications. ![]() We’re talking about like the 12 people responsible for 65% of misinformation about vaccines spread around the internet. It’s a new low from the delusional wing of the anti-vax cult. So do the new coronavirus vaccines cause vaccine shedding of spike protein that can then cause menstrual cycle irregularities, miscarriages, and sterility in women around people who’ve been vaccinated who haven’t been vaccinated themselves? So this is what’s going around the internet right now, and I gotta say, guys, it is a new low. ![]()
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