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I understand this is convoluted. But if you go through it, it makes sense.

My company issued a mandate that everyone get jabbed. Since they're following the federal "mandate", it has to be for the legally FDA APPROVED jab - NOT just an EUA jab.

Since the LEGALLY APPROVED jab (Comirnaty) is not available, why couldn't I just turn back to my company and ask them where to get a FDA APPROVED jab? When they have no answer to that, I sit quietly and let them figure it out.

I'm pretty sure neither the federal gov't nor a private company can make you get jabbed with something not fully approved by the FDA.

Would this work?

I understand this is convoluted. But if you go through it, it makes sense. My company issued a mandate that everyone get jabbed. Since they're following the federal "mandate", it has to be for the legally FDA APPROVED jab - NOT just an EUA jab. Since the LEGALLY APPROVED jab (Comirnaty) is not available, why couldn't I just turn back to my company and ask them where to get a FDA APPROVED jab? When they have no answer to that, I sit quietly and let them figure it out. I'm pretty sure neither the federal gov't nor a private company can make you get jabbed with something not fully approved by the FDA. Would this work?

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

It is in the FDA regulatory documents, FDA wrote this. The two products are legally distinct and have different ingredients but the differences are said to not be significant.

Water as opposed to saline.

But the molecular structures exactly the same.

It's a CYA

If they are in fact different then the EUA one has undergone (some) clinical trials while the approved one hasn't. Without clinical trials how do they know the difference is not significant? The version that has NOT undergone clinical trials has been approved. Wtf is going on.

[–] 1 pt

Pretty much that from what I understand.

And moot point because you can not get it in USA anyway.