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In reply to the discussion: RFK Jr Says Vaccine Contains 'Aborted Fetus Debris' [View all]SARose
(1,701 posts)In order to grow viruses in the lab, cells need to be made into single cell suspensions, meaning they can no longer be grouped together in the form of tissues or organs. As such, vaccines do not contain parts of fetuses.
Vaccines also do not contain fetal cells. Once the vaccine viruses are grown in the cells, the next step in the manufacturing process is to purify the vaccine viruses away from the cells and substances used to help cells grow. If you have ever picked blueberries, you can think of this part of the process as similar. While you are picking, you might get some of the blueberry plant stems, leaves and even branches in your berry bucket, but to use the berries, you remove all of those things, so your pie contains only the blueberries (and any other ingredients you choose to add).
This purification part of the process is important for two reasons. The first, and perhaps most obvious, is the manufacturing reason. From a manufacturers perspective, an efficient process that results in the purest possible product makes the final product easier to characterize. However, as consumers, the second, and more important, reason matters more. A pure product will not introduce unnecessary components that could trigger immune responses or affect us in other ways.
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This horse pucky is the reason so many in my immediate family refused the vaccine. Pffttt
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