Last October, WorldNetDaily tried to hype the purported existence of “VAIDS” — immune deficiency purportedly caused by the COVID vaccine — despite the fact that there is no such thing. It tried to pull that stunt again in a Dec. 11 article by Bob Unruh:
Researchers at Cambridge University have released a study showing that about one-fourth of those people who were given the mRNA shots during the COVID panic now have VAIDS, or Vaccine-Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
It’s long now been known that there sometimes have been horrific side effects from the mRNA treatments that were described as and delivered to people as COVID vaccinations during the pandemic.
Many have died, prompting Iceland to ban them, a plan endorsed by many experts.
Now a report at Slay News describes the results of a Cambridge study that found 25% of all people given the COVID mRNA shots now have Vaccine-Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
According to the report, “The scientists note in their paper that the ‘unintended immune response’ was ‘created by a glitch.'”
Unruh didn’t dislcose that Slay News has been exposed as untrustworthy due to its promotion of “conspiracy theories, pseudoscience, right-wing propaganda, poor sourcing, lack of transparency, failed fact checks, and blatant plagiarism” — of course, that same description applies to WND as well. Meanwhile, an actual, credible news organization examined the claims and found that the Slay News article — and, thus, Unruh’s article — is false, citing the actual authors of the Cambridge study in question:
However, the study’s lead author, James Thaventhiran, an immunologist at Cambridge University, told AFP on December 20, 2023, that “humans regularly encounter unintended proteins and generate harmless immune responses” (archived link).
“Our latest study does not affect the safety assessment of existing mRNA COVID vaccines,” he said. “The data are clear: there is no evidence linking unintended proteins and harmful immune responses.”
Lance Turtle, a co-author of the study, also said the claim circulating online had no basis (archived link).
“[This statement] is simply made up,” the clinician scientist from the University of Liverpool told AFP on December 20, 2023.
“There was absolutely nothing about immunodeficiency in our study…There’s nothing immunodeficient about this, it is the immune system responding to a foreign protein.”
The fact-check quoted experts pointing out that VAIDS “does not exist.”
Because this is WND and it doesn’t typically correct anything unless there’s a threat of a lawsuit, don’t expect it to correct the record; indeed, Unruh’s article remains live and uncorrected.