This image was presented to the FDA.
Not a rumor. Not a fringe claim. The FDA saw this.
In 2010, DNA from two pig viruses — PCV1 and PCV2 — was discovered in oral rotavirus vaccines given to human infants.
Both Rotarix and RotaTeq were investigated.
RotaTeq was even taken off the market for a few months.
Then, quietly, the FDA put it back — declaring it “safe.”
Why?
Because there was:
- “No evidence” that it wasn’t safe
- “No evidence” of harm
- And they didn’t “think” the virus replicated in humans
Not proof of safety.
Just a shrug. A guess. And a green light.
👇 Here’s what PCV2 does to pigs:
(Warning: Real veterinary image shown to the FDA)

They Called This Contaminant “Inconsequential”
PCV2 causes wasting disease in pigs.
Veterinarians know the signs:
- Thin, stunted, rough-coated piglets
- Pale, swollen lymph nodes
- Blotchy purple skin lesions
- Fluid-filled lungs that won’t collapse
- Destroyed immune tissue
- Atrophic livers, ulcerated stomachs
- In many cases: death
And this — or traces of it — was found in a vaccine for human babies.
But It’s Safe... Because It Doesn’t “Replicate in Humans”?
Replication isn’t the only risk.
Any serious scientist knows:
- Viral DNA fragments can insert into the genome
- They can prime autoimmunity
- They can disrupt early immune development
But the FDA didn’t require long-term studies.
They didn’t ask hard questions.
They gave you “no evidence of harm” and moved on.
Then They Scrubbed the Evidence
In the 2020 Rotarix package insert, it was right there:
“DNA from PCV2 has been detected in Rotarix…”
Now?
That line is gone.
Scrubbed from newer versions.
No correction. No announcement. Just erased.
So… did the vaccine change?
Or just the story?
This Isn’t a Warning. It’s a Wake-Up Call.
You weren’t supposed to find out.
Your baby was supposed to open wide. Swallow. Submit.
But now you’ve seen what PCV2 does.
And you’ve seen what they hid.
Now the question is:
What will you do with that?