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Leni Loud Robredo Can Take Comfort In The Fact That Anti-Vaxxer Kate Sheminari Makes Her Look Smart


I may not be liking Leni Loud Robredo (though that doesn't mean I'm automatically for Bobong Marcos) BUT I'd say that anti-vaxxer Kate Sheminari makes her look smart. What makes me think that Kate herself is an utter idiot and Leni Loud probably has more of a brain? At least, Leni Loud acknowledges the fact that there's a pandemic. Meanwhile, Kate continues to deny what even the likes of Joseph Estrada, Benigno Simeon "Noynoy" C. Aquino, and Leni Loud acknowledge to exist. At least, Leni Loud is still smart enough to wear a faceshield and a facemask during her outreach projects. Though Leni Loud still has to be more careful about social distancing protocol and that she should've placed her spaghetti in a proper container.


A documented SCIENTIFIC study on the history of smallpox would tell you vaccines do work. True, that cleanliness is PART of the drive but did having a cleaner environment cause the COVID-19 to go away on its own? Cleaner environments do contribute to help wipe diseases out. We have washing machine and soap today but that won't help the body build immunity to COVID-19. Any safe vaccine is also proven to help the immune system combat the virus. Why do you think polio became nearly a thing in the past? It's because of the polio VACCINE. Why do you think epidemics started to rise in the USA after the increase of anti-vaxxers? It's because of the scare that vaccines supposedly cause autism. 

Kate has IGNORED these words from the British Society for Immunology's article "How vaccines work":

What is vaccination?

Vaccination is the safest way to protect your child against an infectious disease. Once your child has been vaccinated, they should have the ability to fight off the disease if they come into contact with it. They will have a level of protection, or immunity, against the disease.​

How does vaccination work?

The immune system is a network of cells, tissues and organs that work together to help fight off infection from harmful bacteria or viruses. When a disease-causing agent, such as virus or bacteria, invades your body, your immune system recognises it as harmful and will trigger a response to destroy it.

One of the ways your immune system fights off infection is by creating large proteins known as antibodies. These antibodies act as scouts, hunting down the infectious agent, and marking it for destruction by the immune system. Each antibody is specific to the bacteria or virus that it has detected and will trigger a specific immune response. These specific antibodies will remain in the immune system after the infection has gone. This means that if the same disease is encountered again, your immune system has a ‘memory’ of the disease and is ready to quickly destroy it before you get sick and any symptoms can develop.

Sometimes, however, the immune system doesn’t always win this initial battle against the harmful bacteria or virus and you can become very ill or – in extreme cases – die. Vaccination is the safest and most common way to gain immunity against a bacteria or virus that your body has yet to encounter. Vaccines contain a harmless form of the bacteria or virus that causes the disease you are being immunised against. The bacteria or virus will be killed, greatly weakened, or broken down into small parts before use in the vaccine so that they can trigger an immune response without making you sick. Your immune system will still attack the harmless form of bacteria or virus from the vaccine and will produce antibodies to fight it off. The immune system then keeps a memory of the disease, so if a vaccinated person encounters the disease years later, their immune system is ready to fight it off and prevent an infection from developing.

With that, it's safe to assume that Leni Loud probably still has more hope than Kate herself!

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