74% of New Covid Cases in Massachusetts Outbreak Among Fully Vaccinated Individuals

Headlines Health Politics U.S.

A recent study concluded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) finds individuals vaccinated against Covid19 carry just as much of the virus as individuals who are unvaccinated.

The results of the study were posted on the CDC’s website yesterday.

When an outbreak in a Massachusetts county was analyzed it was found that fully 74% of the new cases were in fully vaccinated individuals. The CDC considers an individual fully vaccinated when they have received both doses of either the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, or the single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, 14 days or more before exposure.

During the month of July there were 469 cases of Covid19 that traced back to summer events and gatherings in a town in Barnstable County, MA. Of those, 89% were found to have the so-called Delta variant.

“Although the assay used in this investigation was not validated to provide quantitative results, there was no significant difference between the [cycle threshold] values of samples collected from breakthrough cases and the other cases. This might mean that the viral load of vaccinated and unvaccinated persons infected with SARS-CoV-2 is also similar. However, microbiological studies are required to confirm these findings,” the CDC’s study reads.

Breakthrough cases of Covid infections are cases found in fully vaccinated individuals.

Researchers and scientists have contended for months that Covid vaccines currently being administered in the U.S. actually weaken the body’s immune system. Some also contend due to new variants – which the vaccines may actually be helping to create – the injections will become ineffective in a matter of months.

“When you vaccinate someone who is sick like say, has cancer, is taking immune suppressing cancer drugs, is on chemotherapy…it is very, very dangerous to vaccinate them in my opinion because they’re being forced to make these antibodies which normally they wouldn’t be able to make because their immune system is so sick,” senior MIT research scientist Stephanie Seneff told ITN last month.

“But this vaccine has done such a terrific job of focusing their immune system on making those antibodies, they could succeed. And that would be very dangerous because despite the antibodies they might not be able to fight off the disease.”

“So they have these antibodies, they catch Covid and their antibodies aren’t working because their immune system is so sick. And then the virus has a field day because it can just keep on mutating and mutating until finally it comes up with a version that is completely insensitive to those antibodies and now that version can get loose into a society and we’ve got a mutant strain that doesn’t care at all about the vaccine.”

“This is what I think is going to happen. I’m just predicting, I can’t see the future but I’m predicting that the vaccine will be useless in a short while. I don’t know whether it will be three months or a year. It’ll be useless. Then they’re going to say ok, we got a new version guys…and now everyone gets two shots again.”

“It could keep on getting worse and worse until it becomes so miserable getting that shot that people back off. They’re going to say I don’t want it. They’re going to say I’d rather take my chances on the disease,” Seneff added.

Join the discussion