No. Like I said, I stopped keeping track. My wife is the organized planner in the family who remembers everything. I can barely remember what day of the week it is. I just go for the shots when she does. I know it's at least once a year; there may have been 2 in the first year I stopped keeping track.
Fair enough.
I'm sure I could go dig into my various MyChart accounts to figure it out, but we've gone to a combination of doctor's offices and in-store clinics, so it'd be more hassle than I want to invest in an internet argument.
As I said, you're in the overwhelming minority. Only about 20% of people are following the recommendations of the CDC. I guess the other 80% are now just anti-science, anti-vaxxers.
"authorized" != "recommended"
Please. The CDC has never met a COVID vaccine it didn't fully recommend.
Either way, where are you seeing this? This is the first I'm hearing of 10 doses.
Let's count.
In 2020, the original COVID vaccines were recommended. Two doses. By fall of 2021, it was clear that the protection the vaccines provided lasted for about 30 minutes. So the US government recommended a booster dose (before the FDA had approved them, which led to the top
two vaccine regulators at the FDA resigning in protest). That makes three. Then not long after that, the bivalent booster was recommended. We're up to four. Then they took the approach that if one bivalent booster is good, two must be better. That's five. Then there was a short period of time where they actually recommended that if it had been more than 4 months since your last COVID vaccine, you should get another. That's six. Then they decided (with no data to support the recommendation) that you should get a vaccine every year. It's been two years since then. That's seven and eight. So I stand corrected. There have "only" been eight doses that I can count.
Here's a mashup of Dr. Peter Hotez talking about how great two doses of vaccine would be and how it would be long lasting. Er, three doses. Um, wait, 4 doses. 5? Eh, don't overthink it. Just keep getting more. And more! Don't worry about the number. Just get a vaccine every couple of months.
It's really not. The reason the rest of the world has stopped recommending vaccines for everyone is because they carry risks that outweigh the benefits. That's why roughly 80% of the population has stopped listening to the CDC recommendation to get COVID vaccines AT LEAST every year, and sometimes two or three per year.
There were 5 entries on my card. One was crossed out. I don't remember why.
I'm kind of shocked people still care about their vaccine card. Although I guess it might be good to have it around, just in case the government goes rogue and tries to stop people from socializing again without their approved papers.
Well, I'm in the top quintile in a bunch of areas. What's one more.
80% of the population has stopped listening to the recommendations of the CDC. Not sure why you think that makes you the "top" quintile.
Increased resistance to emerging strains of the disease.
Based on what? Have you followed the ACIP and FDA meetings? There isn't even any data that would suggest what you just said is true. Most of the trials have been done in mice, and have only measured increased antibodies, which the FDA readily admits is not a correlate for protection.
A lot of people do get sick from vaccines. The flu vaccine is pretty well known for this, but it's also a common warning for others.
Yes, I know that's what you've been told. If you can't move and you feel like death warmed over, that just means the vaccine is "working". What's shocking to me is how many people believed that nonsense.
If we're trading anecdotes, I also know of countless people who had the vaccine and had zero ill effects. Personally, I never felt more than a bit run down.
Anecdotally, the people that I know that tell me they've had zero ill effects from the vaccine are sick quite a bit more frequently than those who chose to take fewer doses. Empirically, the Cleveland Clinic ran a study that demonstrated a perfect correlation between increased number of infections and increased number of doses in their workforce.
Source:
https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/10/6/ofad209/7131292?login=false
Of course, fact-checkers dutifully jumped into action to explain why this very concerning result didn't mean what it clearly showed, while the Cleveland Clinic took a more reasonable position in the conclusion of their paper, which stated:
The association of increased risk of COVID-19 with more prior vaccine doses was unexpected. A simplistic explanation might be that those who received more doses were more likely to be individuals at higher risk of COVID-19. A small proportion of individuals may have fit this description. However, the majority of participants in this study were young, and all were eligible to have received ≥3 doses of vaccine by the study start date, which they had every opportunity to do. Therefore, those who received <3 doses (46% of individuals in the study) were not ineligible to receive the vaccine but rather chose not to follow the CDC's recommendations on remaining updated with COVID-19 vaccination, and one could reasonably expect these individuals to have been more likely to exhibit risk-taking behavior. Despite this, their risk of acquiring COVID-19 was lower than that that of participants those who received more prior vaccine doses.
Ours is not the only study to find a possible association with more prior vaccine doses and higher risk of COVID-19. During an Omicron wave in Iceland, individuals who had previously received ≥2 doses were found to have a higher odds of reinfection than those who had received <2 doses, in an unadjusted analysis [21]. A large study found, in an adjusted analysis, that those who had an Omicron variant infection after previously receiving 3 doses of vaccine had a higher risk of reinfection than those who had an Omicron variant infection after previously receiving 2 doses [22]. Another study found, in multivariable analysis, that receipt of 2 or 3 doses of am mRNA vaccine following prior COVID-19 was associated with a higher risk of reinfection than receipt of a single dose [7]. Immune imprinting from prior exposure to different antigens in a prior vaccine [22, 23] and class switch toward noninflammatory spike-specific immunoglobulin G4 antibodies after repeated SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination [24] have been suggested as possible mechanisms whereby prior vaccine may provide less protection than expected. We still have a lot to learn about protection from COVID-19 vaccination, and in addition to vaccine effectiveness, it is important to examine whether multiple vaccine doses given over time may not be having the beneficial effect that is generally assumed.
In a world where the objective is to protect people, this would have been given far more attention and studied more closely to determine the utility and benefit of multiple vaccine doses. But in our world where the objective is to sell more vaccine doses, "fact-checkers" just pretended like the data didn't indicate what it clearly showed so that we could push even more vaccines.
Sure, they didn't get the ventilator thing right.
That's being pretty generous. They wasted millions of dollars in taxpayer money for ventilators that ended up as scrap metal. They
SHOULD HAVE known better. But you don't seem to understand that all the hubbub about ventilators was to scare people. And it worked. Here you are in 2025 telling me that you'd rather take a vaccine that leaves you temporarily incapacitated than end up intubated. Fear is a heckuva thing.
But remember that this was while we were piling bodies in reefer trucks because morgues were running out of space.
Yeah, that's not really true either. There were refrigerated trucks sitting on streets, but nearly all of them were unused. This is not unlike when they sent the USNS Comfort to NYC because hospitals were "overwhelmed", and yet the ship only cared for
182 patients over 3-1/2 weeks. Can you just imagine the cost to deploy that ship from Virginia to NYC to care for 52 people a week for 3 weeks? Not to mention the 1,110 member medical crew that was dedicated to caring for those 7 or 8 people/day? What a massive waste.
Also, do you remember the convoys of military trucks that were carrying dead bodies from COVID? There were images of the Italian Military trucking dead bodies out en masse. But recently, evidence has emerged during the Italian COVID Commission that those trucks contained exactly ONE coffin and ONE body. Here's what it looked like to you.
What valid reason was there for showing images of a convoy of trucks, each carrying only ONE dead body? Theater. Fear. And it worked. Here you are in 2025 talking about reefer trucks full of bodies, all because you read it in the news and saw a picture somewhere.
Tell me, did you ever see a picture of a body being loaded into those trucks? I'd refer you to this article, where an FOIA was sent asking about those trucks. You can read the article for yourself with all of its supporting evidence, but here is the conclusion:
Based on the records FEMA supplied to me, it appears most of the trailers the agency sent to New York City in late March and early April 2020 went largely unused, were requested on the basis of anticipated (versus demonstrated) need, and served theatrical purposes rather than practical ones.
Independent research focused on the COVID-19 event. Click to read Wood House 76, by Jessica Hockett, a Substack publication.
www.woodhouse76.com
I'll forgive the officials for going into panic mode and trying whatever might work.
I will not. There are far too many questions. The panic incited by the governments and propagated by the media and dubious fact-checkers was intentional. Make people scared enough, and they'll do just about anything, no matter how nonsensical and devoid of evidence.