What That COVID Booster Did to Your Immune System

Do You Have Family Members Still Getting or Considering COVID Boosters?
Before getting another COVID booster, there’s an important question many people haven’t been asked:
What does repeated boosting do to the immune system over time?
A report discussed by Dr. Robert Malone and published by TrialSite News points to research suggesting the answer may not be straightforward.
The Key Concern: A Changing Immune Response
After multiple doses, the immune system doesn’t just produce more antibodies—it can begin producing a different type.
The report highlights an increase in IgG4 antibodies following repeated injections.
These are typically seen when the body is exposed to something repeatedly and begins to reduce its level of response.
Put simply: instead of reacting more strongly, the immune system may start to dial things down.
“Repeated boosting may be training the immune system to tolerate the virus rather than fight it.” – Dr. Robert Malone
Why That Matters
Boosters are designed to increase protection. But if the immune system is shifting its response over time, that raises a critical question:
Could repeated doses change how effectively the body responds to infection?
That question is still being studied—but it has not been clearly communicated to the public.
Short-Term Protection Isn’t the Whole Picture
It’s widely accepted that boosters can raise antibody levels in the short term.
But:
- Protection declines within months
- Multiple doses are now being recommended
- Long-term adverse immune effects are still being researched
Repeated boosters were rolled out quickly — but questions about long-term impact are still catching up.
Questions Worth Asking Before Another Booster
For anyone still considering another shot, these are reasonable questions:
- What happens after multiple doses over time?
- Does the immune response change?
- How well studied are the long-term effects?
A Decision That Deserves Full Information
This isn’t about fear—it’s about understanding.
People were told these shots were safe and effective—but far less attention has been given to reports of adverse events following injection, including serious injuries and deaths recorded in national surveillance systems.
While not all reported events are proven to be caused by the shot, their existence raises an important question:
Were people given full and transparent information about potential risks—especially before repeated boosters were recommended?
People deserve clear answers about not just short-term protection, but what repeated boosting does to the immune system over time.
Without full transparency of the risks, there can be no true informed consent.
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