Dogs injected with a new self-replicating RNA rabies vaccine are now developing rabies symptoms, according to experts and veterinarians. Vaccinated pets are suddenly turning violent — biting, drooling uncontrollably, lashing out in fits of rage, and displaying behavior indistinguishable from the deadly disease itself.
Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, a long-time critic of experimental vaccine technologies, recently uncovered one of the most controversial of these products: a new self-amplifying RNA rabies vaccine for dogs.
According to veterinary physician Dr. Faulkner, the documented side effects in vaccinated dogs are “clinically indistinguishable from actual rabies.” Pets have reportedly shifted from passive or lethargic behavior to explosive aggression, rage, and unpredictable biting episodes.
But the concern goes deeper. As Dr. Tenpenny points out, this type of vaccine is designed to replicate inside the body — essentially imprinting the rabies virus blueprint into the dog’s system to provoke a heightened immune response. That raises questions few in the mainstream are willing to confront:
- If the vaccine is replicating inside the dog, could it be present in saliva?
- What happens if a vaccinated dog licks its owner’s face, hands, or an open wound?
- Could this new technology potentially transmit genetic material across species?
When asked these questions, experts admitted they simply don’t know. “Nobody knows. Nobody’s really looked at that,” Dr. Faulkner acknowledged.
In a recent interview with homeopathic veterinarian Dr. Faulkner, Dr. Sherri Tenpenny uncovered a disturbing development in veterinary medicine: a new self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) rabies vaccine for dogs.
— Camus (@newstart_2024) October 2, 2025
The immediate red flag? Dr. Faulkner confirmed that the documented side… pic.twitter.com/UxI3siZCfE
This uncertainty highlights a glaring problem: manufacturers themselves admit they have not tested for neurological effects, cross-species risks, or long-term safety outcomes. Yet the product is being advanced as a breakthrough solution in rabies prevention.
In reality, critics say, it amounts to an uncontrolled live experiment being conducted on family pets.
Animal advocates warn that the implications could be far-reaching, not only for household dogs but also for livestock, wildlife, and potentially humans.
If pets are already displaying rabies-like symptoms, the possibility of a broader biological risk cannot be ignored.
“This isn’t science,” Dr. Tenpenny warned. “This is an uncontrolled experiment. We are injecting our pets with a replicating RNA vaccine for a fatal disease, with side effects that mirror the disease itself — and no one has bothered to investigate the potential for lateral transmission to humans.”