«Seventeen years after the (Sars) outbreak and seven years since the first Middle East respiratory syndrome (Mers) case, there is still no coronavirus vaccine despite dozens of attempts to develop them.» (There was no vaccine for Sars or Mers. Will there be one for the new coronavirus? – South China Morning Post)
● “Why we might not get a coronavirus vaccine “ the Guardian – «Why might a vaccine fail? … England’s deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said the words nobody wanted to hear: “We can’t be sure we will get a vaccine.”
Vaccines are simple in principle but complex in practice. The ideal vaccine protects against infection, prevents its spread, and does so safely. But none of this is easily achieved, as vaccine timelines show.
More than 30 years after scientists isolated HIV, the virus that causes Aids, we have no vaccine.
… Two coronaviruses have caused lethal outbreaks before, namely Sars and Mers, and vaccine research went ahead for both. But none have been licensed» <see Article>
● «There are no independent scientific studies clearing vaccine adjuvants such as aluminum, mercury (thimerasol) and others to be safe to use in the human body, this is tantamount to human experimentation and runs contrary to ‘informed consent’, the Hippocratic Oath and Nuremberg Code. There are many .gov studies showing the opposite, the dangers of these adjuvants.
The article shows how companies that are about to market a vaccine for Covid-19 would be condemned according to the Nuremberg Court (which condemns the “experiments conducted on humans by the Nazis). <See Article>
● The Conversation « An important new study released online this week could have a large bearing on how our future looks in 2021 and beyond. <see study>
It suggests our immunity to SARS-CoV-2 does not last very long at all — as little as two months for some people. If this is the case, it means a potential vaccine might require regular boosters, and herd immunity might not be viable at all. … It therefore follows that COVID-19 vaccines may not be as effective as we hope.» <see Article>