Politics and Religion

Re: You don’t vaccinate for diseases that don’t exist.
durran421 123 reads
posted
1 / 18

When you let let the looney left decide what vax to give yourself or your kids, you've officially lost. You are no longer in control of you.  

From the article posted:  
 

“Anthony Fauci called RFK Jr. a liar for stating that not one of the 72 vaccines mandated for children has ever been safety tested*.  

In response, RFK Jr. took legal action, and after a year of delays, Fauci's lawyers conceded that RFK Jr. had been correct.

"There's no downstream liability, there's no front-end safety testing... and there's no marketing and advertising costs, because the federal government is ordering 78 million school kids to take that vaccine every year."

"What better product could you have? And so there was a gold rush to add all these new vaccines to the schedule... because if you get onto that schedule, it's a billion dollars a year for your company."

"So we got all of these new vaccines, 72 shots, 16 vaccines... And that year, 1989, we saw an explosion in chronic disease in American children... ADHD, sleep disorders, language delays, ASD, autism, Tourette's syndrome, ticks, narcolepsy."

"Autism went from one in 10,000 in my generation... to one in every 34 kids today."

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 13 reads
posted
2 / 18

Instead they’re tested against an older vaccine. So if both vaccines poison you, then a vaccine gets approved as safe when it’s not.  

 
The vaccine schedule itself has never been peer reviewed.  

 
Autoimmune disorders have been skyrocketing. If a person naturally comes across a virus, their body isn’t bombarded with poison. Viral load slowly increases and our immune systems kick in to tamp it down. That’s how our immune system evolved to handle things. But if you add literal POISON to the mix just to artificially boost your immune system to DEFCON 5 then you’re training your immune system to be on high alert for EVERYFUCKINGTHING. The problem is that there’s a very delicate mechanism for your immune system to detect a foreign invading cell from your own. And to make matters worse, some cells reproduce a set number of times before sending out an auto-destruct signal and your immune system takes out those cells. This is done to reduce cancer risk.  So when you bombard your system with poison filled vaccines, then you’re literally training your own body to attack itself.  

 
mRNA vaccines are now becoming more common, and they’re not vaccines, they gene therapy shots. It contains junk DNA that the manufacturer assumes does nothing. But the problem is that the lipid nanoparticle used to deliver the shots binds to cell walls allowing entry of the mRNA into our cells, along with that junk DNA. There’s many parts of our genetic code that’s simply switched off. For instance in the distant past viral DNA could have incorporated into our genetic code and then to combat it, it got switched off. The junk DNA can bind to the switched off DNA and turn it on, leading to any number of possible diseases, from turbo cancer to AIDS, to God knows what else.  

 
The complexity of our immune system is monumental. It’s staggering. And when you haphazardly fuck with a complex system not knowing how it fucking works then you’re bound to fuck things up.  

 
10 years ago I was the last person to ever doubt vaccines. But you’d be a fool to get one knowing what we know now. You’re better off trying the thousands of years of evolution that created your magnificent and wonderful immune system. Take your vitamins, get plenty of sunshine and exercise and stay away from injecting poison into your body.

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 14 reads
posted
3 / 18

Fuck you're dumb doesn't even cover it on this one.  It appears filthy maga traitor cunts would prefer their kids die from measles than get them vaxxed which pretty much 100% protects them from measles.  But hey - fewer dumb filthy maga traitor cunts is a good thing - since you're fucking traitors to the USA. Dumb filthy maga traitor cunts are so remarkably stupid.  

 
As measles outbreaks popped up across America this winter, pediatricians waited for the nation's public health agency to send a routine, but important, letter that outlines how they could help stop the spread of the illness.

It wasn't until last week — after the number of cases grew to more than 700, and a second young child in Texas died from a measles infection — that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention finally issued its correspondence.

 
The delay of that letter may seem minor. But it is one in a string of missteps that more than a dozen doctors, nurses and public health officials interviewed by The Associated Press identified in the Trump administration's response to the outbreak.

 
Health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s efforts to contain an epidemic in a tight-knit, religious community in West Texas have run counter to established public health strategies deployed to end past epidemics.

 
“What we are lacking now is one, clear strong voice — from the federal to the state to the local — saying that the vaccine is the only thing that will prevent measles," said Patricia Stinchfield, a nurse and infectious disease expert who helped stop a 2017 measles outbreak in Minnesota's Somali community.

 
Behind the scenes, Kennedy has not been regularly briefed in person on the outbreak by his own infectious disease experts at the CDC at least through March 21, according to Kevin Griffis, a career staffer who worked as the agency's communications director until he resigned that day.

 
Even after the measles claimed its first young Texas victim in late February, Kennedy had still not been briefed by CDC staff, Griffis said. His account was confirmed by a second former federal health official, who resigned at the end of February.

 
A spokesperson for Kennedy did not answer specific written questions about how he had been briefed or his communications with CDC staff.

 
The spokesperson said the CDC activated an Atlanta-based response in early February to provide overall guidance on measles testing and vaccination strategy. An on-the-ground team was deployed to West Texas throughout most of March and withdrawn on April 1.

 
It was a “joint decision” between state and federal officials to send the team home, CDC spokesman Jason McDonald said. Another team of seven was dispatched back to the region this week.

 
In previous administrations, health secretaries held weekly briefings with CDC staff, lasting between 25 and 30 minutes, during infectious disease outbreaks, both former HHS officials said. Kennedy, instead, received updates on paper or through email, Griffis said.

 
“That is extremely unusual,” said Griffis, who sat in on such briefings with the previous health secretary and said that none were held for Kennedy during his first month on the job. “I’ve never seen that before.”

 
In another irregularity, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the nation's largest network of pediatricians, has not been tapped to work with the CDC on the outbreak, according to the organization's officials. Historically, the CDC and AAP have convened for monthly or biweekly briefings during outbreaks to share updates, which include details about what doctors are seeing and questions they're fielding from parents in exam rooms. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to freely discuss the health department's response.

 
The only updates provided widely to pediatricians by the CDC have come from a health alert network update sent on March 7, a week after the first U.S. measles death in a decade, and the letter sent to providers last week, which, according to the pediatric academy officials, was late in the outbreak.

 
Kennedy praised the CDC on Tuesday during an event in Indianapolis, saying it “had done a very good job controlling the measles outbreak.”

 
Kennedy's inconsistent and unclear message on the measles vaccines has also made the outbreaks difficult to contain, experts say.

 
He has occasionally endorsed the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine as “effective,” but also continues to raise safety concerns about the shots in other statements. In a CBS interview last week, he claimed the vaccines were “not safety tested.”

 
That approach has been the biggest flaw of the government's response, said Dr. Carlos del Rio, the president of the Infectious Disease Society of America.

 
“Imagine if the captain of the Titanic had told you that you need to be careful about lifeboats and think about other opportunities,” del Rio said.

 
Trials were conducted on thousands of children before the vaccine was approved for use in the 1960s. The federal government has since used medical records to continue to monitor for side effects from use in millions of people since.

 
Health secretaries have typically delivered a clear message urging the public to get vaccinated during outbreaks, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, a former deputy director at the CDC who retired after 33 years at the agency in 2021.

 
President Donald Trump and his first-term health secretary, Alex Azar, urged people to get shots during news conferences in 2019, when measles ripped through Brooklyn and infected more than 1,200 nationwide.

 
“You don’t necessarily need the secretary of health to attend a funeral, OK, but you don’t want to have mixed messages on vaccines,” Schuchat said. “Someone in a federal building in Washington can do a lot of harm from the way that they are messaging.”

 
Local leaders have largely been left alone to urge the public to take up vaccinations.

 
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, a Republican, has not urged the public to get vaccinated, either. He has not held any news conferences about the outbreak and posted just once on social media about measles since January. Any statements about the illnesses, which have also put 56 people in the hospital at some point, have been left to his aides.

 
Abbott's office did not respond to questions about his response to the outbreak.

 
Governors in other states have responded more forcefully to the growing measles case count. Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, a Democrat and a doctor, made front page news last week after urging Hawaiians to take up vaccines when the state recorded its first measles case in a year.

 
Ahead of a busy travel week for the Easter holiday, Nebraska Gov. Jim Pillen, a Republican, unequivocally called on people to vaccinate themselves and their children. There are no known measles cases in Nebraska, but an outbreak is active in neighboring Kansas.

 
“If you’re not vaccinated, you’re going to get measles,” Pillen said last week.

 
Those types of statements are important for the public to hear leaders say from the top down, said Dr. Oxiris Barbot, who was New York City's health commissioner during the 2019 measles outbreak.

 
Barbot worked with local rabbis, as well as doctors and nurses in the Jewish community, to send messages that encouraged vaccine uptake. Calls from Trump and Azar, who urged the public to vaccinate, helped her make the case, too.

When national leaders distance themselves from that message, she said it “starts to erode the effectiveness of people who are trying to convey those messages at the local level.”

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 15 reads
posted
4 / 18

a 17th century disease that was all but eradicated until filthy maga traitor cunts decided to stop taking vaccines.  

 
MORON

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 13 reads
posted
5 / 18

Import the third world, become the third world. One of the things you get with open borders is third world diseases.

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 14 reads
posted
6 / 18

No delusional fucking idiot - it's because filthy maga traitor cunts like you aren't vaxxing the kids. Dip shit.  

Fuck you're so fucking retarded and dumb.

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 14 reads
posted
7 / 18

You don’t need to vaccinate against measles if no one has measles. The only reason why any cases of it exists at all is because of open borders. We let in people who were sick and then they passed it to other people.

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 11 reads
posted
8 / 18

There's a reason they don't exist - or at least didn't exist in the USA - because people got vaccinated.  

 
You're getting DUMBER by the post you stupid fucking moron.

durran421 15 reads
posted
9 / 18

What planet do you live on. The covid vax was an untested government pushed vax that did much more harm than good. Fuck your dumb!!

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 9 reads
posted
10 / 18


END OF MESSAGE

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 13 reads
posted
11 / 18

Really?  Then why were we finally able to come out of lock down AFTER the vaccines were implemented and people were able to tolerate the virus and not get sick and die after they got vaxxed.  

Fuck You're Dumb

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 13 reads
posted
12 / 18

We never needed to go into lockdowns. Many red states never did. Sweden never did. All faired better than those that did lock down. Lockdowns were the dumbest policy ever. You don’t lock people in their homes to fight a virus that is only spread indoors.

edinathens 7 reads
posted
13 / 18

"RFK Jr. Says People with Autism 'Will Never Pay Taxes, Hold a Job, Go on a Date,' Sparking Fierce Backlash"
-
http://people.com/rfk-jr-claims-people-with-autism-will-never-work-find-love-or-pay-taxes-11717083?hid=1acd1eff0c87708e19a1221f4346a62f67cb556f&did=17344443-20250417
-
"Autism destroys families, and more importantly, it destroys our greatest resource, which is our children. These are children who should not be suffering like this," [RFK, Jr] said. “These are kids who will never pay taxes. They'll never hold a job. They'll never play baseball. They'll never write a poem. They'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted."
-
Aspergers Syndrome falls in the family of Autism Spectrum Disorders [ASD]. Some people who have/had Aspergers include Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Albert Einstein, Bill Gates, Charles Darwin, Emily Dickinson, Bobby Fischer
-

durran421 4 reads
posted
14 / 18

I tolerated it just fine, never missed a day, never missed a beat, never lined up for an untested jab, never lined up for a booster 75 times. Got covid, tolerated that just fine. Although the people who I work and do business with who DID get jabbed and boostered up, had a helluva time. I remember one person in particular who was first in line every time, have terrible brain fog and plenty of problems. Many others I know say it's made their health very bad and it was the worst decision they ever made. They trusted a crooked democratic government and got burned.  

Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck your dumb.

SnowKing69 11 Reviews 3 reads
posted
15 / 18

Yep, approximately 20% of people were naturally immune.  80% not so much.  Good for you.

FUCK YOU'RE DUMB

durran421 3 reads
posted
16 / 18

80%?? Immune??  You just make shit up all the time or does lying just come natural to you?  

I don't think anyone was immune to it. I'd try to teach you something but it would be a waste of my time and plus you wouldn't understand.  Want to know why??

Because  fuuuuuuuuuck you're dumb!!

willywonka4u 22 Reviews 2 reads
posted
17 / 18

Covid attaches to ACE2 receptors in our throat before moving into our lungs. When you’re young you have a large surplus ACE2, while when you’re old you don’t.  

 
Additionally, if you have an active immunity against one kind of corona virus, there’s some immunity to other corona viruses. There’s several seasonal corona viruses that’s spread every winter in public schools that cause the common cold.  

 
For these reasons, the young had almost no problems with Covid, while it was a very serious issue for the elderly. The average age for dying from Covid was 82.

followme 3 reads
posted
18 / 18

I found other reasons you are the way you are

http://images7.memedroid.com/images/UPLOADED622/66cebe2079103.webp

you really should inform your felching partner ickypus about the above results

Register Now!