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Unlike all vaccines for all of vaccine history, this shot does not confer immunity. mRNA technology was never even intended to be used as a mono-therapy in this way. Read up on the work of Dr Robert Malone, the fella who claims credit for the invention of mRNA technology and indeed who's name is actually on the mRNA patent. For some light reading, Dr Malone's Twitter feed https://twitter.com/RWMaloneMD is very interesting.
So rather than "redefine" it, I'd just like to go back to the original definition before the apparently compromised CDC quietly corrupted it to appease their pharma masters.
Incidentally by the new official meaningless definition, Vitamin C is a vaccine, zinc is vaccine, Ivermectin is a vaccine, eating right is a vaccine. Sure, I've had the vaccine. I had 4 or 5 just yesterday. ;-)
Your post is not exactly accurate...
Why aren’t all vaccines 100% effective?
Vaccines are designed to generate an immune response that will protect the vaccinated individual during future exposures to the disease. Individual immune systems, however, are different enough that in some cases, a person’s immune system will not generate an adequate response. As a result, he or she will not be effectively protected after immunization.
That said, the effectiveness of most vaccines is high. After receiving the second dose of the MMR vaccine (measles, mumps and rubella) or the standalone measles vaccine, 99.7% of vaccinated individuals are immune to measles. The inactivated polio vaccine offers 99% effectiveness after three doses. The varicella (chickenpox) vaccine is between 85% and 90% effective in preventing all varicella infections, but 100% effective in preventing moderate and severe chicken pox.
Top 20 Questions about Vaccination
Detailed answers to the most frequently asked questions about vaccination.
www.historyofvaccines.org