Every year it seems that more people are added to The List of people who qualify!

Qualify for what?

Medical products!  

Of the $1.53 trillion market share of the pharmaceutical industry, the U.S. takes the lead. 

Once upon a time, two main categories were always excluded: pregnancy and sick people.  For evidence of such a list, you have to travel back in the WayBackMachine, when….

  • Pregnant women should not be routinely vaccinated.
  • People who are moderately or severely ill at the time the shot is scheduled should usually wait until they recover before getting vaccinated.
  • Have a history of allergy to eggs, chicken, or gelatin
  • Have HIV/AIDS or another disease that affects the immune system
  • Have been under treatment for 2 weeks or longer with drugs that affect the immune system, such as steroids
  • Have any kind of cancer
  • Are taking cancer treatment with X-rays or drugs

Granted, WayBackWhen, vaccines were different. They were made with chicken eggs, so allergies came into play when injecting them into humans. Ingredient lists were available online. Today, they are gone. 

Since 2017, a study in the Journal of Vaccines and Vaccination, showed that vaccines come with metal toxins and nanomaterials.  A short list of ingredients can be found here without all ingredients listed, such as graphene derivatives, quantum dots, etc.

New studies [2022 Korean study] describes foreign materials found.

Remember, those who experience damage from these products can make complaints on claims to the government, but they cannot sue these trillion-dollar companies because they are exempted from liability.

The Covidian Era

Both Trump and Biden administrations extended protections to mRNA vaccine makers under the PREP Act:

COVID-19 warranted sweeping liability protections, meaning that if someone was injured or died from a COVID-19 vaccine, treatment, or related product, they generally cannot sue for damages in court.

The Covidian Era changed everything!  Today, whether you are a “pregnant person” or a “sick person,” your chances for medical inclusivity have improved.  

  • COVID-19 vaccination offers the greatest benefit if you are at higher risk for severe illness, including if you are pregnant.
  • Pregnancy increases your risk of becoming very sick from COVID-19.
  • If you get sick with COVID-19 during pregnancy, you are at increased risk of complications that can affect your health and the health of your baby.
  • COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy has not been linked to increased health risks for pregnant women or babies. It helps reduce the risk for severe illness from COVID-19.
  • COVID-19 vaccines are not associated with fertility problems in women or men.

Confusion over mRNA

Image by <a href="https://pixabay.com/users/frank-elisante-9894420/?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=9270821">FRANK ELISANTE</a> from <a href="https://pixabay.com//?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=9270821">Pixabay</a>In May 2025, the CDC no longer recommended routine Covid-19 shots for healthy children and pregnant women.  Two potential problems:

  1. Insurance only covers CDC-recommended vaccines.
  2. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it was “extremely disappointed” by the HHS announcement.

What The Studies Say

In the past, pregnant women were not included in medical studies for ethical and moral reasons, based on the Less is Best view.

However, shortly after COVID-19, morals and ethics were thrown out the window. Despite including pregnant women as recipients, damage to the placenta includes the following issues:

  1. increase risk of miscarriage,
  2. preterm birth, and
  3. stillbirth,  
  4. spontaneous allergic reactions,
  5. vascular, blood, endocrine and heart events,
  6. respiratory reports,
  7. gastrointestinal,
  8. hepatic and kidney events,
  9. reproductive and pregnancy issues and the muscle events,
  10. ear, eye, neurologic and psychiatric events

From 2021: COVID-19 in pregnancy: What we know from the first year of the pandemic

From 2022: Current Evidence in SARS-CoV-2 mRNA Vaccines and Post-Vaccination Adverse Reports: Knowns and Unknowns

From 2023:  “I’d [not] do it for my baby”: Lessons learned from qualitative research on COVID-19 vaccination among pregnant women 

Image by <a href="https://pixabay.com/users/klaushausmann-1332067/?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=5917301">Klaus Hausmann</a> from <a href="https://pixabay.com//?utm_source=link-attribution&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=image&utm_content=5917301">Pixabay</a>The 2022 Journal of the American Medical Association confirmed the following:

There is no question that pregnant or nursing mothers, who accept an mRNA injection, deliver toxins in lipid nanoparticles through their bodies, and into their developing fetuses and nursing infants. The contents of mRNA injections do not stay in your arm, not that any vaccine ever did. The point if for the vaccine to reach the lymph nodes. It’s called ‘The Bodyhack – bringing mRNA to the right cells at the right places.”

Knowing that mRNA injections cause harm to anyone injecting them, why inject pregnant women? 

Whether you are on the list or not, the choice is yours!