Dr Mike
RFK. Jr. is a “fear of masonry” …
The mmr vaccine has no fetal debris !!!
Published
Tmz.com
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. might need to suppress his medical books … because his recent comment that the ROR vaccine contains “a lot of debris of aborted fetus and DNA particles” is extremely inaccurate, according to the doctor of family medicine Dr Mike VarshavskiAffectionaly known in more than 4 million Instagram and 13 million YouTube followers like Dr. Mike.
TMZ caught up with Dr. Mike after the interview with the American secretary for health and social services that turned the leader of the leader last week … during which he said that the combined vaccine of measles, mumps and rubella contains “fetal debris” of abortions.
While Dr. Mike notes that there were fetal cells used to create the original vaccine several decades ago … He says that the commentary by RFK Jr. was misleading, even accusing him of “fear of fear” and of being “reckless”.
Here is the situation – Dr. Mike tells us that cells of two abortions made ethically over 50 years ago were necessary to develop a weakened virus for part of the ROR vaccine. He says that the final vaccine has so far been removed from the original cells that there can be a billionth or a billion billion grams of DNA, which has no risk for humans.

Tmz.com
In addition, he tackles a major false idea – that babies are actively injured in the production of vaccines – stressing that he is completely false. The cells collected in the two original fetuses are always reproduced as expected – which means that there is no real fetal tissue in the vaccine.
While Dr. Mike educated us on reality behind RFK Jr.'s comments, he also had a lesson to share with the secretary of the environmental lawyer who has become: accepting the responsibility of your mistakes and being comfortable going back.
Dr. Mike says that he encourages health professionals to constantly change their opinions as new research is deployed, but the problem he sees in the current administration is deceived “perpetually” shared information without solid support.

Tmz.com
And for parents who always be wary of whether the ROR vaccine is safe for their children, Dr. Mike encourages them to turn to their family physicians – and well supported data – for answers.
In addition … He warns against the sources of trust that graduated from the University of Google.
Who knows, maybe the doctor who became a star-social himself could have an appointment or two open!