Aspiring mothers across the country are turning to increasingly unconventional methods for securing the best genetic material for their future children. As resentment and mistrust for Big Pharma spread in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, demand for sperm donations from men who never accepted a COVID vaccine is skyrocketing, potentially redefining what it means to be a “high-value man” in modern-day America.

According to a report from the Daily Mail, this trend was first noticed by frequent sperm donor Jonathan David Rinaldi, a longtime participant in the Sperm Donation USA Facebook group, the country’s largest online sperm donation group. Rinaldi, aka “The Sperminator,” has contributed his genetic samples to the conception of 16 children in the last two years alone. However, after picking up on a growing trend of women specifically requesting sperm from men who never took the COVID vaccine, he decided to create his own spinoff group catering to the anti-vax population.
That new group currently boasts nearly 250 members and, according to the Daily Mail, has helped young professionals, same-sex couples, single women, and others start families in the United States and the United Kingdom—and most of the donations are provided for free. Despite coming from a wide range of backgrounds and social circles, the members of the group are unified by one common factor: a deep mistrust of the Big Pharma narrative about the safety and efficacy of the coronavirus vaccines.
While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and almost every major media outlet have denied the rumors—indeed, even the Daily Mail calls it misinformation in its reporting—concern lingers that the experimental mRNA vaccines can negatively affect fertility in both men and women. Regardless of whether the fears are warranted or not, a growing number of Americans are expressing interest in sourcing reproductive materials from only pureblooded sources.
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“I don’t trust big government, big pharma. I don’t trust them, and I don’t need to inject myself with things that I don’t even know what it is,” Rinaldi told the Daily Mail.
Members of the Facebook group echoed this sentiment, with women looking for “farm-raise, not pharma-raised” specimens and men selling themselves as “not modified by mRNA.”

While female recipients of the donations are not required to be unvaccinated themselves, Rinaldi says that, in a “perfect world,” all parties would have said no to the jab.
“But the reality of it is, not everybody believes in that. Not everybody’s educated,” he said.
“I would love it if no one got vaccinated.”
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