she has skin cancer. Some doctors would recommend a treatment like that so they asked, she refused and that was the end of it. Not a conspiracy or anything. I'm just missing the point on the issue with blood transfusions
Systemic biodistribution of the Pfizer vaccine is now documented and accepted (recently released in redacted form from the Australian government through FOI requests), despite being previously vehemently denied.
Basically, the shot doesn't stay in your shoulder. It gets everywhere, so your immune system is obliged to kill off spike expressing cells which you'd probably rather keep. Of particular interest imo are non-replacable tissues like heart cells and stem cells in bone marrow.
How long it hangs around in tissues it was never supposed to get into and the implications of this are unknown. Methylpseudouridine, included in the Pfizer and Moderna products, is unnaturally persistent.
Personally, I'd take a transfusion since you presumably don't get one unless you're going to die, but I wouldn't take one recreationally.
You'd think people who took the shots would really be asking for some explanations by now since every assurance they received turned out to be false. I find it fascinating that they haven't.