Health · Scamdemic · Technology

Vaxx Scepticism is Going Mainstream

I have written quite a bit about the vaxx, here and on my other blog. While I have been a very early critic of the vaxx, based on a fundamental and well-justified skepticism towards anything our hostile elites push on us, today there are seemingly very few public supporters of the vaxx left. Even the mainstream media sometimes acknowledges that vaxx injuries are real. Of course, the defense is that nobody could have known better, but even this defense does not hold, considering that there is overwhelming evidence of governments suppressing all credible alternative views, which eventually prevailed.

A while ago, I noticed a new phenomenon in my GMail spam folder: anti-vaxx spam emails. I no longer actively use this account because I distrust Big Tech, but I keep it dormant rather than closing it for safety reasons. Every few weeks I log in, primarily just to wipe the spam folder. For some reason, Google is pretty poor at suppressing spam. One such message promised a way to undo vaxx injuries. This is of course not possible, but that is not the point as spam emails are based on there being at least a few gullible recipients.

The fake German Emil Schneider wants to fleece gullible vaxx victims.

There is only spam because it is apparently a viable way of making some money. Spammers send out millions of mails, which costs virtually nothing, and if they only find a dozen or so victims, the effort is probably already worth it for them. From there being spam messages that target vaxx victims, it follows that there a enough people out there waiting to be scammed. This is not a logical inference, of course, but instead a practical observation. These spammers also need to pick their battles and it seems that some of them have identified vaxx victims as a suitable target.

There is of course still more spam about penis pills and cheap Air Jordans. Yet, these are mainstream products. Similarly, vaxx injuries are a mass phenomenon, and they will be around for many decades. It is only consequential that spammers target this market as well, and the fact that they do so reveals that anti-vaxx sentiments, in addition to vaxx injuries, are far from being a niche phenomenon. Hardly anybody is lining up for a booster shot these days. Vaxx injuries are surely one case of this, and spammers want a piece of this market.

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