2.4 Million U.S. College Students Face Mandatory Vaccination Against Chinese Communist Virus

According to statistics, more than 180 universities across the United States require more than 2.4 million students to show proof of vaccination against the Chinese Communist virus (Neocoronavirus) before they can attend classes this fall, and exemptions will not be granted to students who may have been immune to the virus.

In a press briefing on Monday, May 10, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo also required all New York State public university students to be vaccinated before returning to classes in the fall and encouraged private universities to do the same.

According to the analysis, the number of schools mandating student vaccinations could increase again this fall, especially if the FDA fully approves one or more vaccines in the coming months. An investigation by the English-language Epoch Times into vaccination requirements at more than 130 U.S. universities found that none of the schools currently allow it as a reason to exempt people previously infected with the Chinese Communist virus from vaccination, despite evidence that they have broad and long-lasting immunity to the virus.

Several schools, including California State University, the University of Northern Colorado and Southwestern Community College, are still finalizing their final vaccination policies and have indicated that the schools have not yet made a decision on how to respond to students who have been infected with the CCP virus if they request a vaccination exemption. While discussions are still ongoing, they are not informing students of the vaccine requirement on their websites and the schools are considering and may consider such exemptions.

According to a study funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), 95 percent of people who had been infected with the CCP virus had long-lasting immunity to the CCP virus that lasted for up to eight months. And preliminary data on the vaccine suggest that the vaccine provides protection and immunity comparable to that gained by those who have been infected.

Currently, Pfizer and Moderna are already developing booster vaccines, as their vaccine efficacy declines over time. Pfizer says the vaccine’s efficacy, over a six-month period, drops from 95 percent to 91 percent. Modena, on the other hand, says the efficacy of its vaccine will drop to 90 percent in six months. Both vaccine makers agree that people need to be vaccinated again against the CCA virus every year.

According to an NIH-funded study led by Dr. Anthony Fauci and released in late March, in addition to lasting protection, the immunity gained from infection with the CCP virus is also effective against other variants of the virus. People with this acquired immunity have immune system cells that “recognize almost all mutations of the variants studied” and “should be immune to emerging variants of the virus.

“Naturally acquired immunity is stronger than any immunity provided by a vaccine. Therefore, any student who has been infected with a new coronavirus (COVID-19) should be exempt from vaccination,” H. C. Tenenbaum, professor of laboratory medicine and pathological biology at the University of Toronto, told the English-language Epoch Times.

Jay Battacharya, a professor of medicine at Stanford University, said during a roundtable discussion with Governor Ron DeSantis in March, “There is a wealth of evidence in the scientific literature that clearly shows that if you have contracted and recovered from a new coronavirus, the vast majority of people have durable immunity and will likely not be infected again.” “Even if you do get re-infected later, it’s likely not as severe as the first infection. So, yes, it’s just like any other coronavirus. If you get infected, you get immunity and it lasts for a while. It won’t last forever, but it will last for a while.”

At the same roundtable, Sunetra Gupta, a zoonotic disease epidemiologist and professor of theoretical epidemiology at Oxford University, noted that some public health experts cling in a strange way to the notion that it is not known whether there will be lasting acquired immunity after infection with the CCA virus.

“In this case, what do scientists do? They look for other viruses, and we have four other coronaviruses that are spreading. We know from the studies that have been done that they do acquire immunity in a very similar way,” Gupta said, “You make antibodies …… and those antibodies can protect you, especially from serious illness and death. They don’t prevent reinfection, but they can protect you from serious illness and death.”

Regardless of how long acquired immunity can last, studies funded by the NIH have shown that students with acquired immunity have adequate immune protection.

According to a survey conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation, a quarter of young adults between the ages of 18-29 want to “wait and see” before getting vaccinated against the CCA virus. The data suggests that as many as 600,000 students may be forced to opt for the vaccine against their will by this fall, which will not benefit themselves or those around them if they are immune.

To date, the risk of adverse effects from vaccines remains very low, and the CDC’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) has recorded 4,178 deaths after vaccination.