Aluminum in vaccines only tested on 4 rabbits and they lost one

Dr. Toby Rogers was particularly shocked to learn that the approval for the use of aluminum adjuvants in vaccines was based on a study involving only four New Zealand white rabbits. This study, conducted by Flarend et al. in 1997, examined the absorption and elimination of aluminum from vaccine adjuvants. However, it’s worth clarifying that this study is just one among many used to evaluate the safety of aluminum adjuvants in vaccines.

Aluminum has been used in vaccines for decades as an adjuvant to enhance the immune response. The study in question used a radioactive isotope of aluminum (26Al) to track its distribution in rabbits after intramuscular injection. The findings indicated that only a small percentage of the aluminum was excreted, with most remaining in the body, including in organs like the kidneys and liver.

The debate around aluminum in vaccines is complex, involving discussions on pharmacokinetics, toxicology, and epidemiology. While Dr. Rogers and others have raised concerns, the consensus among public health bodies still holds that aluminum in vaccines is safe at the levels used. How about we don’t use it until that debate is settled?

It gets worse. Toby Rogers says something immediately after this piece of the video that is even more terrifying. He says that they are probably adding more aluminum than needed to hide the previous autism statistics that were present when mercury was used as an adjuvant. So they are purposely causing more autism to avoid being seen as the cause of this.