Unfortunately, I did not find your response compelling and I did not find the sources cited either meticulous or impeccable. Of course, I assume that that’s how I would answer; let me tell you why.
First, when I looked up online sources for information about Unlimited Hangout, I could only find information which was supplied by Unlimited Hangout itself. I found references to Ms Whitney Webb as a working journalist, but when I looked for the other publications associated with her, I encountered the same problem. References to MintPress News, which I searched for on Google, contained information about MintPress News written by Mint Press News, even if it was presented in another source. “American Vagabond” was simply a hodgepodge of conspiracy theories justified by the assertion that it contains “in-depth analysis of every conspiracy you’ve ever heard of.” It is also misleading. There was an ad/article which mentioned the Astra/Zeneca vaccine producers as having been implicated in past eugenics experiments. That may be true, but Astra/Zeneca was not approved for distribution in the U.S., although the article clearly wants readers to infer that it is. Not exactly a juried testament to truth-telling and accuracy.
I read the Unlimited Hangout article on the Johns Hopkins/CDC “conspiracy,” and I found it, too, to be unconvincing. First, I was suspicious when it mentioned Department of Defense and Homeland Security oversight of vaccine development and production with no mention of The Department of Health and Human Services. In fact, HHS, which had major oversight of vaccine production, was not mentioned by name until well into the article’s second section.
It contained absolutely no proof of its many assertions, which are so numerous and inaccurate that I don’t want to take the time to list them.
No vaccine is perfect, which any scientist or physician will admit, but to say that the vaccine contains “no inoculations” is mistaken. The vaccine is provided by inoculation! Is the inoculation effective? I’ll leave this info for you.
Common questions
Does the COVID-19 vaccine reduce the risk of getting "Long COVID"?
Research is showing that people who are vaccinated, even with just one dose, tend to have lower rates of long COVID-19 after catching the virus than those who are unvaccinated. Mar 24, 2022
Evidence grows that vaccines lower the risk of getting long COVID – NPR
We have no viewpoints in common. I don’t want to say anything offensive, but you seem to be either particularly credulous, paranoid, in love with conspiracy theories, or desirous of sowing doubt for no apparent reason. I do, however, always appreciate the opportunity to do more homework. Thank you.