Unvaccinated blood donation service spreads to 16 countries

A blood donation service aiming to provide unvaccinated plasma to those who request it now has members in 16 countries, according to Vice News. 

SafeBlood Donation, launched by Swiss Naturopath George Della Pietra, is seeking to open blood banks which offer plasma from those who have not been injected with the COVID-19 shots. SafeBlood and its members are also attempting to pressure lawmakers and hospitals to allow patients who request unvaccinated blood to receive it, though currently no differentiation is made. 

“I get hundreds of emails asking me, ‘Do you have blood [available], because I have surgery coming up in three weeks,’” Pietra said.  

“I’ve never seen blood like this. This was, to be honest, the main reason I started the whole thing, because when I saw this, I was so horrified,” he said about his own studies of COVID-19 vaccinated blood. 

Vice News, which insisted the confirmed lab leak of the virus was a “conspiracy theory,” says Pietra’s conclusion is “wrong” and based on “conspiracy theories”. Vice also reported the Hunter Biden story as a conspiracy theory. 

“We want to be a platform for people who want to have the free choice of blood donors,” Pietra added. “Whether they think there is a real conspiracy theory going on, that the New World Order [is happening], or if they simply say ‘I just don’t want it’ for whatever reason.” 

According to Pietra, “the whole vaccination thing is from my point of view, mainly to do with controlling people.” 

An Italian peer-reviewed study in August found that 94% of those experiencing symptoms following the COVID-19 injections were found to have metallic particles in their bloodstream, according to The Epoch Times. 

“What seems plain enough is that metallic particles resembling graphene oxide and possibly other metallic compounds . . . have been included in the cocktail of whatever the manufacturers have seen fit to put in the so-called mRNA ‘vaccines,'” the authors wrote after studying 1,006 participants. 

“In our experience as clinicians, these mRNA injections are very unlike traditional ‘vaccines’ and their manufacturers need, in our opinions, to come clean about what is in the injections and why it is there,” they added.