Del Bigtree tells Mike Adams: The only way
the pandemic can end now is through natural infection – Brighteon.TV
09/28/2021 / By Nolan Barton
Informed Action Consent Network (ICAN) founder Del
Bigtree tells Health Ranger Mike Adams that the only way the Wuhan coronavirus
(COVID-19) pandemic can end now is through natural infection.
“At the very least, we’ve got to make the United
States of America and our health department recognize what we’ve always known,
which is natural infection leads to the most robust immunity there is,” says
Bigtree during the “Health Ranger Report with Mike Adams” program on Brighteon.TV.
Bigtree laments the fact that White House
coronavirus adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci, the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) are still refusing to acknowledge the value of
natural immunity. (Related: Policymakers ignoring
natural immunity to covid in favor of “vaccine” immunity.)
“We’ve got to change that,” he says, noting that
the vaccine has proven to be a complete failure.
Studies show COVID-19
recovered patients retain broad and durable immunity to the disease
An Emory University study published in the journal Cell
Reports Medicine has found that most people who have recovered from
COVID-19 retain a broad and
durable immunity to the disease, including some degree of
protection against its variants.
After people recover from infection with a virus,
the immune system retains a memory of it. Immune cells and proteins that
circulate in the body can recognize and kill the pathogen if it’s encountered again,
protecting against disease and reducing illness severity.
The study involved 254 COVID-19 patients
between 18 to 82 years old, who provided blood samples at various points for a
period of over eight months beginning April last year. About 71 percent of the
patients had mild disease, 24 percent experienced moderate illness, and five
percent had severe disease.
The researchers have found that most of the
patients who recovered mounted a strong and wide-ranging immune response to the
virus for at least the 250-day duration of the study.
COVID-19 recovered patients also displayed stable
antibody responses to the other human coronaviruses that cause the common cold,
the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) or the Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS).
A study funded in part by the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), of which Fauci
is the director, has also found durable
immune responses in the majority of people who had been
exposed to SARS-CoV-2 and recovered.
The study published on Jan. 6
in Science analyzed immune cells and antibodies from almost 200
participants. Time since infection ranged from six days after symptom onset to
eight months later. More than 40 participants had been recovered for more than
six months before the study began. About 50 people provided blood samples at
more than one time after infection.
Antibodies against the
spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 were found in 98 percent of
participants one month after symptom onset. As seen in previous studies, the
number of antibodies ranged widely between individuals. But their levels
remained fairly stable over time, declining only modestly at six to eight
months after infection.
Experts point to COVID-19
vaccine as cause of virus mutation
Meanwhile, leading experts are pointing to the
COVID-19 vaccine as the cause of virus mutation. (Related: Top doctor: Mass
vaccination program for COVID will be ‘one of the most deadly’ in history.)
“There are clearly sources of information to
suggest that once we start vaccination and we get more than 25 percent of the
population vaccinated, we will allow one of the variants that’s in the
background to emerge because it’s resistant
to the vaccine,” board-certified internist and cardiologist
Dr. Peter McCullough says.
“Just like an antibiotic, once we get to a certain
percentage of coverage with an antibiotic, we’ll allow resistant bacteria to
move forward.”
Dr. Geert Vanden Bossche, who has been interviewed
by Bigtree on his multiplatform program “The HighWire with Del Bigtree,” offers
the same explanation. Vanden Bossche says the ongoing mass vaccination drives
are “likely to further enhance adaptive immune escape as none of the current
vaccines will prevent replication or transmission of viral variants.”
Immune escape is a term used to describe when
the host is no longer
able to recognize and counter a pathogen such as a relevant
variant or mutant of SARS-CoV-2.
“The more we use these vaccines for immunizing
people in the midst of a pandemic, the more infectious the virus will become,”
says Vanden Bossche. “With increasing infectiousness comes an increased
likelihood of viral resistance to the vaccines.”
Bigtree says Vanden Bossche is not
anti-vaccine. In fact, he is a seasoned vaccine developer who coordinated the
Ebola vaccine program at the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization
(GAVI).
Dr. Robert Malone, inventor of mRNA and
DNA vaccines, gives a piece of advice in line with the explanations of
McCullough and Vanden Bossche. “I am reminded of the first rule of holes. When
you are in one, stop digging,” Malone posts on Twitter. He has also been interviewed by Bigtree.
Former Pfizer Vice President Dr. Michael Yeadon has
also appeared on Bigtree’s program. He has implored those in the medical
profession to stop giving COVID-19
vaccines to people who are not at risk of dying from the virus.
“Just stop giving them the vaccine. People are dying,” Yeadon says.
Bigtree notes that Vanden Bossche, Malone and
Yeadon are people who have built legacies developing and promoting vaccines.
“These people are destroying their historic legacy to tell us the truth. That
is so rare and dangerous for them,” Bigtree says.
Watch the Sept. 23 episode of the “Health Ranger
Report with Mike Adams” here:
https://www.brighteon.com/1e7f1c67-460c-4a58-bfeb-38915d568059
You can catch new episodes of the “Health Ranger
Report with Mike Adams” from Monday to Friday at 3-3:30 p.m. on Brighteon.TV
Follow Pandemic.news for more news and information related to the
coronavirus pandemic.
Sources include: