...and the bleach cure. Remember, tights?
Because [[[forcing]]] Americans to vaccinate their children is a hard sell. Sure, it worked in the backwash of WWII., but starting in the late '60's it gets more difficult as we learn the dishonesty of American gov't. We're forbidden to know what happened with JFK. We're forbidden to know what happened with RFK and MLK, and Malcolm X. With UFO's. And I mean this gov't ain't a gonna tell us. NO!
, they won't even tell us we're giving free healthcare to Israel and Ukraine. Even big shot Trump will grudge 'em on a bevy of points, but, will not indict them on this. FOX won't tell us. CNN won't tell us and brag. It's a GD gentlemen's agreement.
Trump reads Biden's last letter left in the WH for him with kindness and understanding and then proceeds to blast him on a daily basis. Calls him everything but a White man. It's disingenuous and humiliating to behold. Either Joe is a monster, or not. Make up your in' mind.
But they want to mandate you take a shot in the arm.
No.
...and the bleach cure. Remember, tights?
Measles wipes immunity to other diseases
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/healt...erm-rcna195918Measles is unlike other childhood viruses that come and go. In severe cases it can cause pneumonia. About 1 in 1,000 patients develops encephalitis, or swelling of the brain, and there are 1 or 2 deaths per 1,000, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The virus can wipe out the immune system, a complication called “immune amnesia.”
When we get sick with viruses or bacteria, our immune systems have the ability to form memories that quickly allow them to recognize and respond to the pathogens if they’re encountered again.
Measles targets cells in the body, such as plasma cells and memory cells, that contain those immunologic memories, destroying some of them in the process.
“Nobody escapes this,” said Dr. Michael Mina, a vaccine expert and former professor of epidemiology at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, who has led some of the research in the field.
In a 2019 study, Mina and his team found that a measles infection can wreck anywhere from11% to 73% of a person’s antibody stockpile, depending on how severe the infection. That means that if people had 100 antibodies to chickenpox before they had measles, they may be left with just 50 after measles infections, potentially making them more vulnerable to catching it and getting sicker.
Akiko Iwasaki, a professor of immunology at the Yale School of Medicine, said: “That’s why it’s called amnesia. We forget who the enemies are.”
In an earlier study from 2015, Mina estimated that before vaccinations, when measles was common, the virus could have been implicated in as many as half of all childhood deaths from infectious disease, mostly from other diseases such as pneumonia, sepsis, diarrheal diseases and meningitis.
The researchers found that after a measles infection, the immune system can be suppressed almost immediately and remain that way for two to three years.
“Immune amnesia really begins as soon as the virus replicates in those [memory] cells,” Mina said.
The best defense against serious complications is the measles vaccine. Two doses of the vaccine are 97% effective in preventing infection.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-52407177"So, supposing we hit the body with a tremendous - whether it's ultraviolet or just very powerful light," the president said, turning to Dr Deborah Birx, the White House coronavirus response co-ordinator, "and I think you said that hasn't been checked but you're going to test it.
"And then I said, supposing you brought the light inside of the body, which you can do either through the skin or in some other way. And I think you said you're going to test that too. Sounds interesting," the president continued.
He was frustrated, his balloon had been severely bursted. And what's more? He knew. And (they/you guys) knew he knew it.
Nothin' he could do but tuck his tail and wait for---what turned out to be (now)...and repeat what he'd said in '17 after the Griffin girl had threatened to saw his head off...
"But I'm President, and their not."
It's a free country, more or less...cept when you want to know who killed Epstein, JFK, RFK, MLK, 9/11, on & on.
tee, hee.
The Trump disclosures are disappointing, eh?
Of course. We know no more than we knew before them.
They're not going to disclose the truth of any of these events, ever. No way.
And Trump goes right along with that rule. That rule is non-negotiable. "We'll let you close gov't offices and toss illegals out, and fly 'em out, but, here is the list of things that must be obeyed, or, the next time we will not miss, sir."
"Understood. McDonald's? On me."
Malpractice lawsuit incoming
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/d...after-measles/
When the girl was admitted to the ER, the staff made a general diagnosis that she had a secondary bacterial pneumonia. “She was clearly being admitted from the community so it was implied that it was a community-acquired pneumonia,” Kory said, referring to how the girl didn’t get the pneumonia from being in a hospital or healthcare facility.
They were “absolutely correct” about that, Kory said.
But what they initially gave her for that diagnosis was incorrect, he said.
Generally, doctors put patients on two antibiotics “to cover all the possibilities” of what specific kind of bacterial pneumonia the patient may have.
Kory said:
“It’s in every guideline — infectious disease, pulmonary — every guideline in the country tells you that for a hospitalized child or adult who gets admitted to the hospital, you put them on two antibiotics.
“One is from a category called beta-lactams, which is like penicillin, cephalosporins. And they [the hospital] got that part correct. They put her on something called ceftriaxone, which was excellent.
“But you always need to pair it with an antibiotic from a different category, which is called a macrolide or a quinolone.”
They didn’t do that part, Kory said. “They didn’t put her on the most common, which is azithromycin.”
Instead, they put her on vancomycin, an antibiotic used for very drug-resistant organisms like MRSA.
Should've gotten the vaccine.![]()
should've given her a z pack
weird because they hand them out like candy usually
Last edited by SnakeBoy; 03-22-2025 at 06:39 PM.
Shoud've gotten an MMR like any non-insane parent would get them.
Weird because they're widely available and effective.
Think that defense holds up in court?
Would've alived the child.
Not that you give any s about that at all.
Z pack would've done that too
You gave the thumbs up to the kid dying not me
MMR would've obviated all that. Sorry. You're not going to win being anti-vaxx when you've been vaxxed to the gills.
Thumbs up for life-saving vaccines, which you are clearly against for no reason whatsoever.You gave the thumbs up to the kid dying not me
Nothing I've said is anti-vax.
You're happy the child is dead because the hospital docs ed up...serves them parents right huh?
It's really sad. Nothing to be happy about besides your meltdown and the real effort you're putting in here to win the internet this Saturday night.
They should've vaxxed the kid. Easy peasy. That is all their fault their kid is dead and they'll have to live with that. I don't wish that on them. I wish they had vaxxed their kid.
No doubt in my mind who they voted for
Okay, you're really sad
Do you think the hospital should be off the hook for their actions because the parents should've done something 5 years ago?
Never said any of that. The sad truth is the parents could've avoided the hospital visit and the inherent risks with a couple of shots during trips to Walmart.
Did you win yet?
Refusing vaccination but then taking your kid to a modern hospital for high tech, often invasive and drug-laden treatment of their acute illness, seems dissonant
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