Microstructure Technology Professor Dr. Hervé Seligmann, previously with the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) Faculty of Medicine Emerging Infectious and Tropical Diseases Research Unit, examined fertility in countries that have massively vaccinated against COVID-19 compared to those that...
americasfrontlinedoctors.org
The video at the bottom references some of the “black eyes” stuff I’ve seen referenced here.
I have read the article and some interesting piece of data popped up: they correlate fertility with vaccination rate. Then they control for wealth. And the only country that is an outlier is ... drumroll ... Israel. Who would have thought?
"In the second graph, the data are corrected according to the wealth of the countries (poorer countries have higher fertility). After the correction, Seychelles and Mongolia return to the norm, and only Israel continues to enjoy relatively high fertility despite the high percentage of vaccinated women:"
The article explains Israel with this: "Israel is Pfizer’s laboratory state, and that it must have been given a high percentage of placebo recipients to test the vaccine results against them as a control group." Though it is not necessary to explain why Israel is an outlier since the fertility of Israel was always an outlier when controlled by wealth. This is something that all conspiracy theorist have known for decades. (And we also have a plausible explanation of the cause...) It is not a new phenomena of the Covid era.
I don't think though that this kind of data aggregation has any use. It does not count the fact that people just don't want to have children in this unstable environment. The level of hysteria is correlated with the level of vax rate and thus hysteria could cause lower fertility. We don't even need the vaccine to have less babies.
Figure 3 analyses the difference between 2019 and 2021 in function of vax rate. I see very small correlation on these data points. The computer can draw a line but it is not obvious that there is a strong correlation there.
The author of the article suspects that the measurable decrease of fertility was caused by miscarriages. But it fails to gather data about miscarriages but only measures live births. I understand that this is the data that is accessible but that is just not enough to support the statement.
So I find this article poor quality. We need better data to conclude that vaccine causes infertility. I would bet that it causes infertility but this is not the way to prove it.