Nicki Minaj publicly questions vaccination, gets aired out by Joy Ann Reid and media

The White House offers a call to Nicki Minaj to discuss vaccine safety. :hmm: :hithead:

By Alyssa Lukpat and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

After the rapper Nicki Minaj questioned the efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccine in a Twitter post this week, the White House confirmed on Wednesday that it had offered her a call with a doctor to answer questions about the safety of the vaccine.

Ms. Minaj’s comments drew widespread attention after she said she would not attend the Met Gala on Monday because she had yet to receive the vaccine, which was required for attendees.

“As we have with others, we offered a call with Nicki Minaj and one of our doctors to answer questions she has about the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine,” a White House official said in a statement on Wednesday night.

Ms. Minaj appeared to believe that she was going to visit the White House. She said on Twitter on Wednesday that she would “be dressed in all pink like Legally Blonde so they know I mean business.”

“I’ll ask questions on behalf of the ppl who have been made fun of for simply being human,” she added.

On Monday, Ms. Minaj asserted that her cousin’s friend in Trinidad and Tobago “became impotent” after receiving the vaccine, a claim that nation’s minister of health, Terrence Deyalsingh, rejected.

“There has been no such reported either side effect or adverse event,” he said in a news conference online. “And what was sad about this is that it wasted our time yesterday, trying to track down, because we take all these claims seriously, whether it’s on social media or mainstream media.”

 
The White House offers a call to Nicki Minaj to discuss vaccine safety. :hmm: :hithead:

By Alyssa Lukpat and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

After the rapper Nicki Minaj questioned the efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccine in a Twitter post this week, the White House confirmed on Wednesday that it had offered her a call with a doctor to answer questions about the safety of the vaccine.

Ms. Minaj’s comments drew widespread attention after she said she would not attend the Met Gala on Monday because she had yet to receive the vaccine, which was required for attendees.

“As we have with others, we offered a call with Nicki Minaj and one of our doctors to answer questions she has about the safety and effectiveness of the vaccine,” a White House official said in a statement on Wednesday night.

Ms. Minaj appeared to believe that she was going to visit the White House. She said on Twitter on Wednesday that she would “be dressed in all pink like Legally Blonde so they know I mean business.”

“I’ll ask questions on behalf of the ppl who have been made fun of for simply being human,” she added.

On Monday, Ms. Minaj asserted that her cousin’s friend in Trinidad and Tobago “became impotent” after receiving the vaccine, a claim that nation’s minister of health, Terrence Deyalsingh, rejected.

“There has been no such reported either side effect or adverse event,” he said in a news conference online. “And what was sad about this is that it wasted our time yesterday, trying to track down, because we take all these claims seriously, whether it’s on social media or mainstream media.”

So this why Candace Jumped in :roflmao: :roflmao:
 
Just want to leave this here.



"The National Vaccine Information Center was founded in 1982 by Barbara Loe Fisher, who has said that her son was injured by a vaccine. The group claimed credit this year for helping to defeat legislation in a dozen states that would have made it harder for parents to opt out of vaccinating their children.

At the beginning of last year’s flu season, Fisher and Mercola appeared in a YouTube video urging people to be skeptical about flu shots. Mercola claimed that vaccines have been associated with “deaths and permanent neurological complications,” and he said vitamin D supplements were among “far more effective, less expensive and less risky alternatives.”
Such claims are highly misleading, government health officials say.

For example, they say, while on very rare occasions people have developed the neurological disorder Guillain-Barré syndrome after receiving the flu shot, research suggests the disorder is more strongly associated with contracting the flu itself than with receiving the vaccine. In addition, while some studies have suggested that vitamin D might help prevent the flu, others have found no such benefit, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that the best way to protect against the infection is vaccination.

Mercola referred The Post to materials he said showed evidence that vaccines can be harmful, including some studies on vaccines no longer in use. Experts and government health officials say medical evidence overwhelmingly supports the safety and efficacy of vaccines.


“He mixes the boring, sensible health advice with pseudoscientific advice in such a way that it’s hard for someone without a medical background to figure out which is which,” said David Gorski, an oncologist and surgeon at Wayne State University who is widely regarded as a leading expert on the anti-vaccine movement."
 
Interesting point! Nicki gets that Black immigrant privilege, I guess!

@Darrkman @ugk and @Non-StopJFK2TAB tried to promote anti-Black American sentiment via Nicki in the thread. But it's hard to pull off because she not FBA and we don't fuck with her like that, so they abstaining. We'll see the trolls again next time an opportunity to bash a Black American woman comes up.

Fat Joe (immigrant background) is literally getting roasted today for disrespecting our women on Verzuz. The internet provides them a safe space and anonymity to do it with little consequence, it's hard to resist.
 
Thank you telling us that...(just kidding)..

...on the real, which vaccine did you get? Any problems at all? With so many people talking, nobody really knows what's going on.

I had the one dose J&J back in April in Germany and didn't feel a thing. Went back to work the next day. I've traveled to countries where the COVID restrictions are pretty loose (Bosnia, Poland, Lithuania) and have been protected so far. Every COVID test I've taken since is always negative. I still wear masks where advised or mandatory.
My take: When it's your time, it's your time. Vaxxed people have died, non vaxxed people have also died. But spreading information that can make people doubt the effectiveness of the vaccine is not quite right. IMO. We all are entitled to say what we want, but then, at what cost?
 




Ryan Grim, Kim Iversen, and Robby Soave react to Nicki Minaj's recent tweets sharing her hesitancy to get vaccinated against COVID-19.
 
No, she is. :dunno:






See, Nicki is GOP and frustrated with Dems like a lot of folks in her community. Barbz goin wild right now.

@Darrkman @ugk and @Non-StopJFK2TAB tried to promote anti-Black American sentiment via Nicki in the thread. But it's hard to pull off because she not FBA and we don't fuck with her like that, so they abstaining. We'll see the trolls again next time an opportunity to bash a Black American woman comes up.

Fat Joe (immigrant background) is literally getting roasted today for disrespecting our women on Verzuz. The internet provides them a safe space and anonymity to do it with little consequence, it's hard to resist.
You are just making things up.
 
This thread is a composium of da board's star idiots.

It wouldn't be so bad if she hadn't started with the cousin, friend thing.

All these people are saying research but yet hasn't researched the vaccinations injected into us previously since gotdamn forever.

Has Nicki even questioned the vaccinations her baby has received, but yet she's speaking on this. What about those in her ass?

I'm no fan so she can really stfu.

Da only real questions that need to be answered is why she always finds herself in da company of registered sex offenders.
 
"The National Vaccine Information Center was founded in 1982 by Barbara Loe Fisher, who has said that her son was injured by a vaccine. The group claimed credit this year for helping to defeat legislation in a dozen states that would have made it harder for parents to opt out of vaccinating their children.

At the beginning of last year’s flu season, Fisher and Mercola appeared in a YouTube video urging people to be skeptical about flu shots. Mercola claimed that vaccines have been associated with “deaths and permanent neurological complications,” and he said vitamin D supplements were among “far more effective, less expensive and less risky alternatives.”
Such claims are highly misleading, government health officials say.

For example, they say, while on very rare occasions people have developed the neurological disorder Guillain-Barré syndrome after receiving the flu shot, research suggests the disorder is more strongly associated with contracting the flu itself than with receiving the vaccine. In addition, while some studies have suggested that vitamin D might help prevent the flu, others have found no such benefit, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said that the best way to protect against the infection is vaccination.

Mercola referred The Post to materials he said showed evidence that vaccines can be harmful, including some studies on vaccines no longer in use. Experts and government health officials say medical evidence overwhelmingly supports the safety and efficacy of vaccines.


“He mixes the boring, sensible health advice with pseudoscientific advice in such a way that it’s hard for someone without a medical background to figure out which is which,” said David Gorski, an oncologist and surgeon at Wayne State University who is widely regarded as a leading expert on the anti-vaccine movement."
The information is coming from Vaers, a publicly accessible FDA created database. The company merely did a search of the FDAs database and found that yes, there have been more than 60 reports of testicular swelling after the vaccine
 
The information is coming from Vaers, a publicly accessible FDA created database. The company merely did a search of the FDAs database and found that yes, there have been more than 60 reports of testicular swelling after the vaccine

Disclaimer

"VAERS accepts reports of adverse events and reactions that occur following vaccination. Healthcare providers, vaccine manufacturers, and the public can submit reports to the system. While very important in monitoring vaccine safety, VAERS reports alone cannot be used to determine if a vaccine caused or contributed to an adverse event or illness. The reports may contain information that is incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental, or unverifiable. In large part, reports to VAERS are voluntary, which means they are subject to biases. This creates specific limitations on how the data can be used scientifically. Data from VAERS reports should always be interpreted with these limitations in mind.

The strengths of VAERS are that it is national in scope and can quickly provide an early warning of a safety problem with a vaccine. As part of CDC and FDA’s multi-system approach to post-licensure vaccine safety monitoring, VAERS is designed to rapidly detect unusual or unexpected patterns of adverse events, also known as “safety signals.” If a safety signal is found in VAERS, further studies can be done in safety systems such as the CDC’s Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) or the Clinical Immunization Safety Assessment (CISA) project. These systems do not have the same scientific limitations as VAERS, and can better assess health risks and possible connections between adverse events and a vaccine.

Key considerations and limitations of VAERS data:

  • Vaccine providers are encouraged to report any clinically significant health problem following vaccination to VAERS, whether or not they believe the vaccine was the cause.
  • Reports may include incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental and unverified information.
  • The number of reports alone cannot be interpreted or used to reach conclusions about the existence, severity, frequency, or rates of problems associated with vaccines.
  • VAERS data is limited to vaccine adverse event reports received between 1990 and the most recent date for which data are available.
  • VAERS data do not represent all known safety information for a vaccine and should be interpreted in the context of other scientific information.

VAERS data available to the public include only the initial report data to VAERS. Updated data which contains data from medical records and corrections reported during follow up are used by the government for analysis. However, for numerous reasons including data consistency, these amended data are not available to the public."
 
Disclaimer

"VAERS accepts reports of adverse events and reactions that occur following vaccination. Healthcare providers, vaccine manufacturers, and the public can submit reports to the system. While very important in monitoring vaccine safety, VAERS reports alone cannot be used to determine if a vaccine caused or contributed to an adverse event or illness. The reports may contain information that is incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental, or unverifiable. In large part, reports to VAERS are voluntary, which means they are subject to biases. This creates specific limitations on how the data can be used scientifically. Data from VAERS reports should always be interpreted with these limitations in mind.

The strengths of VAERS are that it is national in scope and can quickly provide an early warning of a safety problem with a vaccine. As part of CDC and FDA’s multi-system approach to post-licensure vaccine safety monitoring, VAERS is designed to rapidly detect unusual or unexpected patterns of adverse events, also known as “safety signals.” If a safety signal is found in VAERS, further studies can be done in safety systems such as the CDC’s Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) or the Clinical Immunization Safety Assessment (CISA) project. These systems do not have the same scientific limitations as VAERS, and can better assess health risks and possible connections between adverse events and a vaccine.

Key considerations and limitations of VAERS data:

  • Vaccine providers are encouraged to report any clinically significant health problem following vaccination to VAERS, whether or not they believe the vaccine was the cause.
  • Reports may include incomplete, inaccurate, coincidental and unverified information.
  • The number of reports alone cannot be interpreted or used to reach conclusions about the existence, severity, frequency, or rates of problems associated with vaccines.
  • VAERS data is limited to vaccine adverse event reports received between 1990 and the most recent date for which data are available.
  • VAERS data do not represent all known safety information for a vaccine and should be interpreted in the context of other scientific information.

VAERS data available to the public include only the initial report data to VAERS. Updated data which contains data from medical records and corrections reported during follow up are used by the government for analysis. However, for numerous reasons including data consistency, these amended data are not available to the public."
While you reporting all that timing is key when it comes to VAERS.The CDC has been caught numerous times tampering with the VAERS database.
 
While you reporting all that timing is key when it comes to VAERS.The CDC has been caught numerous times tampering with the VAERS database.
Vaers is a reporting of raw data and not a complete study.
So to you use such data as proof is very misleading.
The NVIC has a clear agenda and so of course they and other anti vaccine folks would use such data as if it is a complete study with the conclusion that the vaccine caused this, that, or the other.





then there's this:


"The Northern Virginia-based National Vaccine Information Center lists Mercola.com as a partner on its homepage and links to the website, where readers can learn about and purchase Mercola’s merchandise.


Last month, Mercola wrote on his website that measles “continues to be a Trojan Horse for increasing vaccine mandates.” A page that was recently removed said that “vitamin C supplementation is a viable option for measles prevention.”

Elsewhere on the site, a page about vitamin D includes the headline, “Avoid Flu Shots With the One Vitamin that Will Stop Flu in Its Tracks.”
Mercola, whose claims about other products have drawn warnings from regulators, has also given at least $4 million to several groups that echo the anti-vaccine message. His net worth, derived largely from his network of private companies, has grown to “in excess of $100 million,” he said in a 2017 affidavit.

Mercola said in emails to The Washington Post that he contributes to the center because he believes in its mission. He said he offers “simple, inexpensive and safe alternatives to the conventional medical system, which is contributing to the premature death of millions and is causing needless pain and suffering in great part because multinational corporations want to increase their revenues.”

He declined to be interviewed and did not respond to questions about how much profit his vitamin D and C supplements generate relative to the rest of his wide-ranging merchandise, which includes organic cotton underwear and pet food. Supplements containing those vitamins are among Mercola’s “top products,” his website says.


In a statement, his media team said the claims on Mercola’s website relate to vitamin D and vitamin C generally and “do not mention Dr. Mercola’s products whatsoever.”
 
Here's a video which breaks down a lot of of the why of what's going on overall, hope some of you take the time to watch and understand.

The Real Reason Behind EVERYTHING

 
Vaers is a reporting of raw data and not a complete study.
So to you use such data as proof is very misleading.
The NVIC has a clear agenda and so of course they and other anti vaccine folks would use such data as if it is a complete study with the conclusion that the vaccine caused this, that, or the other.





then there's this:


"The Northern Virginia-based National Vaccine Information Center lists Mercola.com as a partner on its homepage and links to the website, where readers can learn about and purchase Mercola’s merchandise.


Last month, Mercola wrote on his website that measles “continues to be a Trojan Horse for increasing vaccine mandates.” A page that was recently removed said that “vitamin C supplementation is a viable option for measles prevention.”

Elsewhere on the site, a page about vitamin D includes the headline, “Avoid Flu Shots With the One Vitamin that Will Stop Flu in Its Tracks.”
Mercola, whose claims about other products have drawn warnings from regulators, has also given at least $4 million to several groups that echo the anti-vaccine message. His net worth, derived largely from his network of private companies, has grown to “in excess of $100 million,” he said in a 2017 affidavit.

Mercola said in emails to The Washington Post that he contributes to the center because he believes in its mission. He said he offers “simple, inexpensive and safe alternatives to the conventional medical system, which is contributing to the premature death of millions and is causing needless pain and suffering in great part because multinational corporations want to increase their revenues.”

He declined to be interviewed and did not respond to questions about how much profit his vitamin D and C supplements generate relative to the rest of his wide-ranging merchandise, which includes organic cotton underwear and pet food. Supplements containing those vitamins are among Mercola’s “top products,” his website says.


In a statement, his media team said the claims on Mercola’s website relate to vitamin D and vitamin C generally and “do not mention Dr. Mercola’s products whatsoever.”
Vaers are actual reports from people or doctors from alleged side effects from the vaccine. US taxpayers paid the Pharma companies 100s of billions of dollars for the vaccine, yet they’ll explain how they “haven’t had a chance to follow up” on the reports. Because they never follow up, they can call them “unproven” and continue with the false narrative that there are no side effects, which is a lie.

Nicki said that her cousin’s friend got enlarged testicles after getting the vaccine. 64 other people in the United States said the same thing. I’m confident that no one followed up to find out if it was true or not with anyone either here or in Trinidad.

Hell the Trinidad health minister said no over ever reported the symptom in the world, a clear lie because 64 people in the US alone have reported it.
 
I had the one dose J&J back in April in Germany and didn't feel a thing. Went back to work the next day. I've traveled to countries where the COVID restrictions are pretty loose (Bosnia, Poland, Lithuania) and have been protected so far. Every COVID test I've taken since is always negative. I still wear masks where advised or mandatory.
My take: When it's your time, it's your time. Vaxxed people have died, non vaxxed people have also died. But spreading information that can make people doubt the effectiveness of the vaccine is not quite right. IMO. We all are entitled to say what we want, but then, at what cost?

Real knicca is what you is...brah
 
Vaers are actual reports from people or doctors from alleged side effects from the vaccine. US taxpayers paid the Pharma companies 100s of billions of dollars for the vaccine, yet they’ll explain how they “haven’t had a chance to follow up” on the reports. Because they never follow up, they can call the unproven and then move on.

Nicki said that her cousin’s friend got enlarged testicles after getting the vaccine. 64 other people in the United States said the same thing. I’m confident that no one followed up to find out if it was tru or not with anyone.

Hell the Trinidad guys said no over ever reported the symptom in the world, a clear lie because 64 people in the US alone have reported it.
Alleged does not equal proof. Those are two different things.
Siting VAER's raw data does not back up Niki's claim whatsoever and it's just misleading information being pushed as a fact.
There is no conclusion in that data that links the two.

Btw did you even read the disclaimer?
 
Alleged does not equal proof. Those are two different things.
Siting VAER's raw data does not back up Niki's claim whatsoever and it's just misleading information being pushed as a fact.
There is no conclusion in that data that links the two.

Btw did you even read the disclaimer?
The government or pharmaceutical companies can not fail to investigate side effects and say that there is no proof. There is proof, a person claimed the side effect. it’s up to them to refute it, with the 100s of billions they made off the drug.

It’s like a person calling 9-1-1 and reporting a rape. The police never follow up, and then say the crime rate is zero because no one ever proved the rape. It’s their job to prove or disprove it.
 
Vaers are actual reports from people or doctors from alleged side effects from the vaccine.

You don't know that. Literally anyone can submit a report with zero proof.

Hell the Trinidad health minister said no over ever reported the symptom in the world, a clear lie because 64 people in the US alone have reported it.

He very clearly caveated his statement with a "none that we know of" so unless you can prove that he was aware of the completely unverified reports on VAERS, it was not a lie.
 
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The government or pharmaceutical companies can not fail to investigate side effects and say that there is no proof. There is proof, a person claimed the side effect. it’s up to them to refute it, with the 100s of billions they made off the drug.
So in others words you're just going to swim down denial.

A claim is not proof. Anyone can claim anything they want. I can claim you are a man. Is my claim proof enough to prove that you are indeed a man?
 
Here's a video which breaks down a lot of of the why of what's going on overall, hope some of you take the time to watch and understand.

The Real Reason Behind EVERYTHING




GottDAMNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!!!!!!!!!

Thought this was gonna be some crackpot shit. Man listen. His ass bout ta disappear. Great breakdown on following the money behind this shit.
 
GottDAMNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!!!!!!!!!

Thought this was gonna be some crackpot shit. Man listen. His ass bout ta disappear. Great breakdown on following the money behind this shit.
I wish many would listen to that vid, can play it while driving or something, but it's major as to all this shit with Covid.

Too many look at the sources, and don't want to listen with an open mind, just shoot down whatever aint on CNN or any main stream news and social sites, when they are the very channels being controlled to tell you what to think.

In all my life I have never seen so much censorship.

Even on BGOL, they stickied and are gloating over the deaths of a human life with the Herman Cain thread.

I'm in shock that people can't see the bigger picture or just don't care.
 
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CDC Caught Deleting 150k of Vaccine Death Cases From VAERS Website-Vaccine Genocide

You niggas need to check the sources before you start believing shit. :hmm:

Brighteon
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  • We rate Brighteon a right-biased Tin-Foil Hat Conspiracy website that also publishes pseudoscience. This source is associated with Natural News, one of the most discredited sources on the internet.

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You niggas need to check the sources before you start believing shit. :hmm:

Brighteon
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CONSPIRACY-PSEUDOSCIENCE
Sources in the Conspiracy-Pseudoscience category may publish unverifiable information that is not always supported by evidence. These sources may be untrustworthy for credible/verifiable information; therefore, fact-checking and further investigation is recommended on a per article basis when obtaining information from these sources. See all Conspiracy-Pseudoscience sources.

  • We rate Brighteon a right-biased Tin-Foil Hat Conspiracy website that also publishes pseudoscience. This source is associated with Natural News, one of the most discredited sources on the internet.

Bias Rating: FAR RIGHT CONSPIRACY-PSEUSDOSCIENCE
Factual Reporting: VERY-LOW
Country: USA (45/180 Press Freedom)
Media Type: Website
Traffic/Popularity: High Traffic
You think they give a fuck about the source? As long as it fits their narrative it's all good.
Those sources can be wrong a thousand times and they'd still take what they are reporting at face value. Then turn around an tell you about CNN, etc....lying to the people. That they are bought and paid for as if sources like Brighteon, etc....aren't bought and paid for. A lot of these folks are just straight up contrarians.
 
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