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Why does the Pfizer Covid-19 jab contain Drug-resistant Bacteria?

Updated: Oct 20, 2021

WHAT ARE HIGHLY RESISTANT BACTERIA CONTAMINANTS DOING IN A VACCINE TO COMBAT A VIRUS?

 

BACKGROUND

A couple of months ago, I was looking at the Astrazeneca jab sequence and I discovered that the Astrazeneca and Johnson & Johnson jabs contained a beta herpesvirus (aka. Human Cytomegalovirus or HMCV for short).


For a long time, I couldn't find the sequence information for Pfizer to see what nasty modifications they had made to their jabs.


After a bit of persistence, and a bit of time up my sleeve, I managed ti find it.


The below post steps through how I learned what was hiding in the Pfizer jabs...


Firstly, I took a look at the PFIZER sequence...


I noticed there are 2 mutations made to the sequence with specific names:

  • K986P and

  • V987P

I did the usual DuckDuckGo search

(I don't bother with Google anymore, they have financial stakes in vaccine manufacture and foundations making a killing off the jabs)

In addition to other links, I found this site popped up:

When clicking the link, I was taken here...

Straight away, I noticed the Pdf download icon for the Datasheet and Safety Data Sheet (SDS).

This is what I found...

After a brief read through this document containing very little information, I noticed the Endotoxin level

and it got me thinking...

What the hell is an endotoxin?

DuckDuckGo to the rescue!

ENDOTOXINS

Endotoxins are heat-stable lipopolysaccharides from Gram-negative bacteria and are potential contaminants that can be introduced during the manufacturing of pharmaceutical products, including vaccines.


Injected pharmaceutical products must undergo endotoxin testing since endotoxins are infectious organisms or their product toxins or cytokines that provoke fever in humans and can induce severe physiological reactions.

Limulus amebocyte lysate (LAL) test for endotoxins

The blood extracted from the Atlantic horseshoe crab reacts with bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS). This reaction is the basis of the LAL test, which is widely used for the detection and quantification of bacterial endotoxins.


To test a sample for endotoxins, it is mixed with lysate and water; endotoxins are present if coagulation occurs (Interesting background info about the horseshoe crab HERE).


Lipopolysaccharides

Lipopolysaccharides (LPS) are large molecules consisting of a lipid and a polysaccharide composed of O-antigen, outer core and inner core joined by a covalent bond; they are found in the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria.


Right, so the Pfizer jabs contain gram-negative BACTERIA

more searches...


What is gram-negative bacteria?

Gram-negative bacteria are found in virtually all environments on Earth that support life. The gram-negative bacteria include the model organism Escherichia coli, as well as many pathogenic bacteria, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Yersinia pestis. They are an important medical challenge, as their outer membrane protects them from many antibiotics (including penicillin), detergents that would normally damage the inner cell membrane, and lysozyme, an antimicrobial enzyme produced by animals that forms part of the innate immune system. Additionally, the outer leaflet of this membrane comprises a complex lipopolysaccharide (LPS) whose lipid A component can cause a toxic reaction when bacteria are lysed (disrupted) by immune cells.

This toxic reaction can lead to low blood pressure, respiratory failure, reduced oxygen delivery, and lactic acidosis—a life-threatening condition known as septic shock.


Gram-negative bacteria cause infections including pneumonia, bloodstream infections, wound or surgical site infections, and meningitis in healthcare settings. Gram-negative bacteria are resistant to multiple drugs and are increasingly resistant to most available antibiotics.

 

Okay, that's not sounding good, and now there's a whole bunch of other bacteria names I need to understand

more searches...

Pathogenic Bacteria

Pathogenic bacteria are bacteria that can cause disease. Most species of bacteria are harmless and are often beneficial but others can cause infectious diseases. The number of these pathogenic species in humans is estimated to be fewer than a hundred.


Bacterial Coinfections in Coronavirus Disease 2019

Published online 2021 Apr 8.

Yersinia pestis

Yersinia pestis (Y. pestis) (formerly Pasteurella pestis) is a gram-negative, non-motile, rod-shaped, coccobacillus bacterium, without spores that is related to both Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and Yersinia enterocolitica. It causes the disease plague, which caused the Black Death, the deadliest pandemic in recorded history.


You may find this article eye-opening


Epidemic of plague amidst COVID-19 in Madagascar: efforts, challenges, and recommendations

Published: 13 July 2021


"The plague has been wreaking havoc on people in Madagascar with the COVID-19 pandemic. Madagascar’s healthcare sector is striving to respond to COVID-19 in the face of a plague outbreak that has created a new strain on the country’s public health system."


"From January 1 to March 11, 2021, at least 21 confirmed cases of bubonic plague have been confirmed in Madagascar. Eight of these cases have been reported since March 1, 2021, in Ambositra and Mandarina. Since the start of the year 2021, 37 suspected cases have been reported, affecting multiple regions, including Alaotra-Mangoro, Analamanga, Haute Matsiatra, and Itasy. Until 12 March 2021, the disease led to approximately nine deaths."

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a common encapsulated, Gram-negative, strict aerobic (although can grow anaerobically in the presence of nitrate), rod-shaped bacterium that can cause disease in plants and animals, including humans.


A species of considerable medical importance, P. aeruginosa is a multidrug resistant pathogen recognized for its ubiquity, its intrinsically advanced antibiotic resistance mechanisms, and its association with serious illnesses – hospital-acquired infections such as ventilator-associated pneumonia and various sepsis syndromes.

 

HERE IS AN INTERESTING ARTICLE FROM MAY 2021...


Acute SARS-CoV-2 infection is associated with an expansion of bacteria pathogens in the nose including Pseudomonas Aeruginosa

Published 20/05/2021


"Specifically, we report a distinct increase in the prevalence and abundance of the pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa in COVID patients that correlated with viral RNA load. These data suggest that the inflammatory environment caused by SARS-CoV-2 infection and potentially exposure to the hospital environment leads to an expansion of bacterial pathogens in the nasal cavity that could contribute to increased incidence of secondary bacterial infections. Additionally, we observed a robust host transcriptional response in the nasal epithelia of COVID patients, indicative of an antiviral innate immune repones and neuronal damage."


Chlamydia trachomatis

Chlamydia trachomatis is a common sexually transmitted infection (STI) caused by bacteria. You might not know you have chlamydia because many people don't have signs or symptoms, such as genital pain and discharge from the vagina or penis. Chlamydia left untreated also leads to infertility.

 

THIS ARTICLE DISCUSSES THE RISE IN CHLAMYDIA SINCE COVID-19

Published 19/05/2021


"Male patients had higher baseline positivity rates than female patients for both chlamydia (6.8% vs 4.0%, p<0.001) and gonorrhea (3.4% vs 0.7%, p<0.001). During the COVID-19 pandemic period, positivity rates increased significantly among male patients (chlamydia: to 8.0%, 18% increase, p<0.001; gonorrhea: to 4.8%, 41% increase, p<0.001) and female patients (chlamydia: to 4.4%, 10% increase, p<0.001; gonorrhea: to 1.0%, 43% increase, p<0.001)."

Escherichia coli (E. Coli)

Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria normally live in the intestines of healthy people and animals. Most types of E. coli are harmless or cause relatively brief diarrhea. But a few strains, such as E. coli O157:H7, can cause severe stomach cramps, bloody diarrhea and vomiting.

 

This article discusses Multi Drug Resistant Escherichia coli Superinfection in Patient with COVID-19

Published 09/2021


"Case Presentation: Here we reported a 46 years old patient with the previous history of Escherichia coli urinary tract infection. A few weeks later, the patient was recovered from COVID-19 infection and was treated with antiviral therapy until PCR results become negative. Meanwhile, the patients developed urinary tract infection with MDR Escherichia coli even resistant to imipenem and required a critical treatment.

Conclusion: Our finding suggests that greater attention should be paid to coronavirus infection complications and prophylaxis use of antibiotics. In addition, more studies are required to better understand the risk factors which are responsible for the superinfection and emergence of drug-resistant strains during COVID-19 infection."

 

Simply put, the Pfizer jabs contain bacteria! And not just any bacteria, bacteria that is highly toxic to humans, and very resistant to most drugs and antibiotics.


Bacteria that cause anything and everything including gastro, infertility, plague, sepsis, meningitis, and death!


The articles above (all written from May 2021 and more recently) discuss about cases of increased plague, increased chlamydia, and gonorrhea in COVID-19 patients, and that means 1 of 2 things....


EITHER:

A: The COVID-19 'virus' is MAN-MADE and released either intentionally or accidentally to humans as no infectious disease is both a virus AND a bacteria combined into one antigen,


AND / OR

B: The reports are written about vaccinated patients who developed COVID-19 after vaccination and are suffering from the side effects to the endotoxins in the PFIZER jabs themselves.

 

WHY DO THE PFIZER COVID-19 JABS CONTAIN ENDOTOXINS IF THEY ARE DANGEROUS TO THE HEALTH OF HUMANS?

WHAT ARE HIGHLY RESISTANT BACTERIA CONTAMINANTS DOING IN A VACCINE TO COMBAT A VIRUS?

 

And just so I know I am not going completely crazy...the World Health Organization reaffirms my initial understanding about COVID-19 being a virus, not a bacteria...

 

So the next time you are at your GP Clinic and the Doctor asks you if you have had the jab..

Maybe you should ask your Doctor why deadly, drug-resistent endotoxins are in the Pfizer jabs!

 

Further reading:

RND Systems


Structure of SARS-COVID-LIKE Protein


Misreading of Codons during translation


Detailed Sequence

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