@yoshi121374 no idea of this was a well designed study or not. But the thesis and conclusion are interesting.
It seems it’s been a thesis for a long time.I'm not on X, but it appears that the study was done in 2010. Without diving too deep, doubt it was proven since we haven't heard of this any further.
Duh...health ranger is the source for that tweet.LOL, source please!
LMAODuh...health ranger is the source for that tweet.
Fake organization...
Dr. Peter McCullough: "What we've learned is this childhood vaccine schedule is not what we thought. And now critically looking at it, we have a situation that, we just learned that the World Council for Health now international body is calling for a complete moratorium on childhood vaccines. First international organization to call for that. Why? Because the vaccines are piling up one after another."
"They're being given in multiple salvos. There are safety events now that we learned. In 1986, the US passed legislation that indemnified the manufacturers of vaccines. In that legislation, it says the vaccines have unavoidable harm. It says that it so what are the harms that we're seeing?
"It's clear when the vaccines are given in multi multiple rounds. There's probably not no single vaccine and no single additive, but it's the sum total of vaccines given at once. We're seeing a strong signal towards, neuropsychiatric disorders, so attention deficit disorder, Asperger's, autism, seizures, allergic diseases, asthma, atopic dermatitis, sudden infant death syndrome."
"And then the converse now. This is the converse, which is papers by Mawson, Hooker, Miller, Thomas, and an older Amish study. All five studies show if children go natural, no vaccines whatsoever, they have the best outcomes. Freedom from these things."
"You know, when I was a kid, the rate of autism was one in ten thousand. Now it's one in thirty six. And there's about 200 published manuscripts showing it's a immune system dysregulation. The immune system dysregulation that, you know, in a reactogenic phase of the vaccine, sometimes with a febrile seizure, the the inflammatory factors go into the brain, probably permanently change it, and the vignettes the mothers tell us that the child was fine up until the time they took a multiple rounds of of vaccines and then they developed autism."
"Those vignettes are almost certainly correct. We can't pin it down to any single vaccine, but I'm telling you, in total, it doesn't look good. This epidemic of autism is a tsunami. And you know how, you know, many, many mothers now recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey showed, you know, about a third of mothers and young fathers going natural."
This may be the most ignorant post you’ve ever made.
The anti vax crowd is too far gone to reason with. The nuance it takes to understand vaccines requires thinking. Someone who is anti vax just has an over exaggerated fear response and is more susceptible to fear mongering. Spreading out vaccines does more harm than good. The few occurrences of some formaldehyde and aluminum in vaccines are harmless and temporary.
Spreading out vaccine schedules results in three negatives. 1) Increased risk of infection via more occurrences of injections. 2) Weaker immune response with less antigen-material being exposed to the body at one time (I.e., baby’s immune system really ramps up the immune response and antibody production/storage if it sees 4 different vaccines at one time than if it just sees 1 or 2. This is much better for a kid both immediately and in the long run). 3) More pain for the baby as it has more frequent appointments for injections. More crying, more Tylenol needing to be given to soothe the baby, etc.
Nobody wins in a spread out vaccine schedule, except for the ignorant parents’ conscience.
Repeated, high-volume exposure to formaldehyde and aluminum in the bloodstream is harmful, yes. Vaccines contain small amounts of these as stabilizers. A person’s blood contains trace amounts of formaldehyde and aluminum anyway. So yes, there is a difference in a pregnant woman repeatedly eating fish that are high in mercury affecting a fetus and a small amount of mercury in a vaccine being given to a newborn 4 times at most.
Autism diagnoses are up due to a broader definition of autism (also known as “the spectrum”). People often mistake coincidence for causation in that vaccine schedules often line up with major developmental milestones, or “milestone explosions” where children will reach numerous developmental milestones in a short period. Since the general range for normal vs delayed can be a matter of weeks or months at such a young age, vaccines are easily blamed for “causing” autism when they do not. If vaccines were not given near developmental milestones (which would be nearly impossible considering the amount of milestones kids have in their first 2-3 years of life), you would probably see less skepticism about vaccines and autism.
Lastly, vaccines (the well-established ones. The covid vaccine is an entirely different discussion) have proven time and time again to be extremely safe and effective in reducing child mortality and overall disease burden. Smallpox was damn near eradicated due to vaccines (just off the top of my head, not 100% sure there. I think it was at least deemed eradicated at one point). Polio went from being a national emergency that killed and/or paralyzed thousands upon thousands to being a complete afterthought. Measles and mumps went from being widespread to now the occasional outbreak anytime a specific geographic area gets exposed to too much anti vax rhetoric and suffers an outbreak. Measles used to kill hundreds of kids a year, now even with the occasional stupid outbreak it’s in the single digits. Tetanus used to kill tons of kids, now it’s a complete afterthought.
The problem with anti vaxxers is that their “science” has been disproven more times than anyone can count. Additionally, most anti vaxxers were vaccinated themselves and have benefited from vaccinations. Also, because most of the “vaccinate-able” diseases have been so effectively reduced, the average American has no concept of what going through one of these diseases is like.
Look up pictures of kids with tetanus infection. It is absolutely brutal. I’m talking months in an ICU, bed-ridden, in excruciating pain from full body muscle cramps that can be so strong it pulls a child’s muscle off of the bone. And if a kid gets tetanus but wasn’t vaccinated? No cure. No suppressive treatment. Just a multi month stay in an ICU, intubated, in the worst pain of your life 24/7.
If the predatory idiots who peddle this anti vax nonsense didn’t have so much public influence the world would be a much better place.
It’s easy to get caught up in anecdotal evidence. This experience is not typical. For example, I work in healthcare and therefore have to get the flu shot every year. A lot of my coworkers have had the flu this year, but have only been out 102 days each. I’ve worked alongside them while they were symptomatic and I haven’t gotten the flu. Everyone’s immune system is different. Sounds like your family just has generally stronger immune systems and/or y’all have good hand hygieneI can only speak to our experience. We are not anti-vax but did spread out vaccines early on for both kids (ie 3 at once instead of 6 at once).
We also do not get the flu shot (parents or kids) and did not get the Covid vaccine.
The result?
My kids are sick far less than other kids. Other kids constantly seem to have something, snotty noses, etc etc. Our kids very rarely get sick.
Nobody in the family has ever had the flu.
My wife and youngest never got Covid. My oldest and I both got it back when people still got pretty sick. He was sick for 24 hours then totally fine. Just slept most of the time. I felt bad for 36 hours then was totally fine. The ease with which our bodies dispatched the virus made me wonder why I would want a vaccine to alter our natural response.
Now these things could have nothing to do with how we’ve handled vaccines, but based on the results for my family, why on earth would I want to change how we approached it?
It’s easy to get caught up in anecdotal evidence. This experience is not typical. For example, I work in healthcare and therefore have to get the flu shot every year. A lot of my coworkers have had the flu this year, but have only been out 102 days each. I’ve worked alongside them while they were symptomatic and I haven’t gotten the flu. Everyone’s immune system is different. Sounds like your family just has generally stronger immune systems and/or y’all have good hand hygiene
I remember going to Folly beach as a kid and washing your hands before eating was rinsing them in the ocean and patting them dry on your shorts. Today’s kids will never know!Last part is true. I think my wife would dip the kids in a vat of hand sanitizer if she could.
oof, unbelievably off base. Good luck in your life.The anti vax crowd is too far gone to reason with. The nuance it takes to understand vaccines requires thinking. Someone who is anti vax just has an over exaggerated fear response and is more susceptible to fear mongering. Spreading out vaccines does more harm than good. The few occurrences of some formaldehyde and aluminum in vaccines are harmless and temporary.
Spreading out vaccine schedules results in three negatives. 1) Increased risk of infection via more occurrences of injections. 2) Weaker immune response with less antigen-material being exposed to the body at one time (I.e., baby’s immune system really ramps up the immune response and antibody production/storage if it sees 4 different vaccines at one time than if it just sees 1 or 2. This is much better for a kid both immediately and in the long run). 3) More pain for the baby as it has more frequent appointments for injections. More crying, more Tylenol needing to be given to soothe the baby, etc.
Nobody wins in a spread out vaccine schedule, except for the ignorant parents’ conscience.
Repeated, high-volume exposure to formaldehyde and aluminum in the bloodstream is harmful, yes. Vaccines contain small amounts of these as stabilizers. A person’s blood contains trace amounts of formaldehyde and aluminum anyway. So yes, there is a difference in a pregnant woman repeatedly eating fish that are high in mercury affecting a fetus and a small amount of mercury in a vaccine being given to a newborn 4 times at most.
Autism diagnoses are up due to a broader definition of autism (also known as “the spectrum”). People often mistake coincidence for causation in that vaccine schedules often line up with major developmental milestones, or “milestone explosions” where children will reach numerous developmental milestones in a short period. Since the general range for normal vs delayed can be a matter of weeks or months at such a young age, vaccines are easily blamed for “causing” autism when they do not. If vaccines were not given near developmental milestones (which would be nearly impossible considering the amount of milestones kids have in their first 2-3 years of life), you would probably see less skepticism about vaccines and autism.
Lastly, vaccines (the well-established ones. The covid vaccine is an entirely different discussion) have proven time and time again to be extremely safe and effective in reducing child mortality and overall disease burden. Smallpox was damn near eradicated due to vaccines (just off the top of my head, not 100% sure there. I think it was at least deemed eradicated at one point). Polio went from being a national emergency that killed and/or paralyzed thousands upon thousands to being a complete afterthought. Measles and mumps went from being widespread to now the occasional outbreak anytime a specific geographic area gets exposed to too much anti vax rhetoric and suffers an outbreak. Measles used to kill hundreds of kids a year, now even with the occasional stupid outbreak it’s in the single digits. Tetanus used to kill tons of kids, now it’s a complete afterthought.
The problem with anti vaxxers is that their “science” has been disproven more times than anyone can count. Additionally, most anti vaxxers were vaccinated themselves and have benefited from vaccinations. Also, because most of the “vaccinate-able” diseases have been so effectively reduced, the average American has no concept of what going through one of these diseases is like.
Look up pictures of kids with tetanus infection. It is absolutely brutal. I’m talking months in an ICU, bed-ridden, in excruciating pain from full body muscle cramps that can be so strong it pulls a child’s muscle off of the bone. And if a kid gets tetanus but wasn’t vaccinated? No cure. No suppressive treatment. Just a multi month stay in an ICU, intubated, in the worst pain of your life 24/7.
If the predatory idiots who peddle this anti vax nonsense didn’t have so much public influence the world would be a much better place.
Please point out what I said that was so off base. I’m going off of the proven data and evidence-based medicine. Vaccines are safe. There is no debate there. The risk of being unvaccinated against previously eradicated diseases far outweighs the risk of the vaccines themselves.oof, unbelievably off base. Good luck in your life.
Again your ability to find the stupidest shit on the internet is unmatched.
why even post this bullshit from a grifter scamming anti-vaxer? ...
ronald reagan's administration said ketchup counts as a vegetableThis is where I am. We absolutely are getting fatter. Our food supply as well as food marketing is pretty outrageous. We have a really distorted view of portion sizes in America.
What is going to be interesting to see is if changes to diet will be embraced once the added cost up front of healthier foods. When Michelle Obama tried to overhaul school lunches to address the issues it was lambasted and not accepted due to the added cost for school lunches.
he should hold the press conference on the same day that JFK appears in Dealey Plaza