The Vaxx is Working

Depopulation, not the prevention of the spread of Covid-19, was always the goal.

To investigate whether COVID-19 vaccination before conception affects fertility, measured by successful conceptions (SCs) — pregnancies resulting in live births.

  • Population: ~1.3 million women aged 18–39 in the Czech Republic.
  • Study Period: January 2021 – December 2023.
  • Vaccination Coverage: ~70% of women vaccinated by end of 2021 (mostly Pfizer/Comirnaty and Moderna).
  • SC Calculation: Births per 1,000 women, comparing those vaccinated before conception vs. unvaccinated.

Key Findings

  • Women vaccinated before conception had consistently lower SC rates than unvaccinated women.
  • SCs for vaccinated women were disproportionately low relative to their share of the total population:
  • Example: In June 2021, 39% of women were vaccinated, but they accounted for only 7% of SCs.
  • Throughout 2022, SC rates in unvaccinated women were about 1.5× higher than in vaccinated women. In other words, successful conceptions for vaccinated women were ~33% lower compared to unvaccinated women in 2022.
  • The total fertility rate in the Czech Republic declined during the study period (from 1.83 in 2021 to 1.45 in 2023 – 21% decrease).

Another new study on rats indicates how the vaxx reduces female fertility by an estimated 60 percent. The good news is that while vaccinated fertility is reduced, it is not eliminated entirely, although obviously the way in which the vaxx interacts with RNA and DNA may have additional adverse effects on the children of the vaxxed.

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