My questions just happen to have a certain vibe. Coincidence? I’m just asking.
Let me be crystal clear about something before we go any further: I am not anti-vaccine. I want that on the record. I have said it now, which means it’s true, and anything I say after this point cannot be used to suggest otherwise.
What I am is pro-questions. And folks, I have questions. So many of them. Questions that, if you squint, might seem to cluster around a particular theme. But that’s not my fault. That’s where the inquiry led me.
The Questions No One Will Answer
Here’s one: Why won’t they just tell us what’s in it? I know they have told us. I’ve seen the ingredient lists. But why won’t they tell us in a way that makes me feel like they’re not hiding something? That’s different.
And another: If it’s so safe, why do they have to keep saying it’s safe? Suspicious. Things that are actually safe don’t need defenders. You never see Big Seatbelt out there doing press conferences.
Also: How come my cousin felt tired the day after? Tired. Let that sink in. They want you to think that’s normal. Maybe it is. But maybe—and I’m just raising concerns here—maybe it isn’t.
I Did My Own Research
Now, I know what you’re thinking. “Brent, where did you get your medical degree?” And to that I say: where did the so-called experts get their courage to admit they might be wrong? Exactly. They didn’t. Because they can’t. Because they’re compromised.
I’ve spent hours on this. Hours. I’ve watched videos. I’ve read comments under articles. I’ve had conversations with people who know people. As I wrote in my column about doing my own research, you can’t buy that kind of education. Mostly because no accredited institution offers it.
Just Asking Questions Is Actually Brave
The mainstream media wants you to think that raising concerns is the same as spreading misinformation. But here’s the thing: questions have question marks. Misinformation has periods. Totally different punctuation. I rest my case.
If having concerns makes me dangerous, then call me dangerous. Actually, don’t call me that. I don’t want to be on a list. I’m just a guy with worries. Worries that happen to align perfectly with a certain online ecosystem. Another coincidence.
The Bottom Line
Look, I got the thing. Years ago. For something else. And I’m fine. Probably. The point is, I’m not telling you what to do. I’m just posing inquiries designed to make you feel uncertain about something millions of experts have studied. There’s a difference.
And if you disagree with me, I’m not mad. I’m just wondering: why are you so defensive? What are you hiding? Why won’t you engage with my very reasonable concerns that I found on a website with a lot of exclamation points in the URL?
Something’s going on. I don’t know what. But something. And until someone answers my inquiries in a way that completely validates what I already believe, I’ll keep at it. That’s what the Socratic method is all about, folks. Look it up.
That’s called critical thinking. And I’m full of it.