Vaccines Armed and Dangerous - The Seminar THEY Don't Want You T
- Type:
- Audio > Audio books
- Files:
- 11
- Size:
- 600.39 MB
- Spoken language(s):
- English
- Tag(s):
- vaccination conspiracy autism immunization
- Uploaded:
- Aug 24, 2012
- By:
- GnanoByte
VACCINATE, DON'T VACCINATE IT'S YOUR FREEDOM, IT'S YOUR CHOICE IT'S YOUR DECISION. Are we saying, ΓÇ£Don't get vaccinated, don't vaccinate your childrenΓÇ¥? ABSOLUTELY NOT. We aren't advising or demanding anything. We aren't medical doctors, either. We're independent researchers. Which means we rely on our own intelligence, experience, skills, and commitment to finding the best truths we can. We consult the best sources we can find. So none of these statements we make in this seminar are intended to prevent, alleviate, treat, or cure disease. They are intended as education only. And we happen to believe that education is one of the most powerful forces in the world. Another one is freedom, the freedom to make your own decisions. Jon Rappoport has worked as an independent investigative reporter for 30 years. Nominated early in his career for a Pulitzer Prize, he has published articles on medical fraud, politics, and health for LA Weekly, CBS Healthwatch, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers in the US and Europe. The author of INC., Oklahoma Bombing, The Ownership of All Life, and The Secret Behind Secret Societies, Jon was one of the early bloggers, and has been writing, since 2000 at his site, www.nomorefakenews.com. Jon has hosted radio shows in Las Vegas and Los Angeles, and ran for a Congressional seat, in 1994, in Los Angeles, on a platform of Health Freedom. He has delivered many seminars to audiences around the world. Robert Scott Bell hosts the fastest two hours of healing information on radio, dealing with everyday health issues from the perspective of alternative/holistic health care. Robert Scott Bell tackles the tough issues and shows no fear when confronting government and corporate bullies who would stand in the way of health freedom. Robert Scott Bell is a homeopathic practitioner with a passion for health and healing unmatched by anybody on radio. He personally overcame numerous chronic diseases using natural healing principles and has dedicated his life to revealing the healing power within all of us.
Just so everyone understands, the connection between vaccine and autism has been disproved, Jenny McCarthy was wrong and now Measles is on the rise.
dead97gsx Disproved? When and how?
it was disproved b4 she even started her nonsense. the 1 and only study that links them was discredited a long time ago. this kind crap is dangerous and it cost people their lives. there are children now dying of measles for fucks sake because of crap like this.
There is no increased risk of autism spectrum disorder for infants exposed to ethylmercury from vaccines and immunoglobulin preparations containing the preservative thimerosal, according to a new study.
Researchers analyzed medical data on 1,008 children from three managed care organizations (256 with ASD and 752 without the disorder). They looked at prenatal and infant exposure to thimerosal.
"The study results indicated that exposure to thimerosal-containing vaccines, including during pregnancy, is not associated with developing ASD or specific ASD subtypes," said Frank DeStefano, MD, MPH, one of the study's authors and director of the Immunization Safety Office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The study in the October issue of Pediatrics is the latest to disprove the autism-thimerosal link (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20837594).
A 1998 study in The Lancet sparked fears of a link between autism and the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. The journal retracted the article last February, days after the General Medical Council, which licenses and disciplines British doctors, charged study investigator Dr. Andrew Wakefield with acting unethically for his disregard of the "distress and pain" of unnecessary tests on child subjects.
Even so, many parents still fear the preservative contributes to autism. A study published online March 1 in Pediatrics found that about one in four parents believes vaccines cause autism, and 11.5% have refused at least one recommended vaccination for their child.
The National Autism Assn., which maintains that vaccines cause autism in some children, was reviewing the new study, a spokeswoman said at this article's deadline.
In a Sept. 15 statement regarding a settlement in an autism-thimerosal court case, NAA Executive Director Rita Shreffler said thousands of children have been adversely affected by vaccines.
"Parents who observe regression and failing health following vaccines are told it's just coincidence. Many of us no longer buy that," she said. "We know that our children suffered brain injury from vaccines, resulting in a diagnosis of autism."
Dr. DeStefano said he hopes the new study will help allay the concerns of parents and pregnant women.
During the last decade, thimerosal has been removed or reduced to trace amounts in vaccines routinely recommended for children in the U.S., with the exception of influenza vaccine. But parents can request doses of thimerosal-free influenza vaccine, said Dr. DeStefano, who has done research in the area for nine years.
"The results of our study indicate that concerns about a possible increased risk of autism from thimerosal-containing influenza vaccines are unfounded," he said.
Researchers analyzed medical data on 1,008 children from three managed care organizations (256 with ASD and 752 without the disorder). They looked at prenatal and infant exposure to thimerosal.
"The study results indicated that exposure to thimerosal-containing vaccines, including during pregnancy, is not associated with developing ASD or specific ASD subtypes," said Frank DeStefano, MD, MPH, one of the study's authors and director of the Immunization Safety Office at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The study in the October issue of Pediatrics is the latest to disprove the autism-thimerosal link (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20837594).
A 1998 study in The Lancet sparked fears of a link between autism and the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. The journal retracted the article last February, days after the General Medical Council, which licenses and disciplines British doctors, charged study investigator Dr. Andrew Wakefield with acting unethically for his disregard of the "distress and pain" of unnecessary tests on child subjects.
Even so, many parents still fear the preservative contributes to autism. A study published online March 1 in Pediatrics found that about one in four parents believes vaccines cause autism, and 11.5% have refused at least one recommended vaccination for their child.
The National Autism Assn., which maintains that vaccines cause autism in some children, was reviewing the new study, a spokeswoman said at this article's deadline.
In a Sept. 15 statement regarding a settlement in an autism-thimerosal court case, NAA Executive Director Rita Shreffler said thousands of children have been adversely affected by vaccines.
"Parents who observe regression and failing health following vaccines are told it's just coincidence. Many of us no longer buy that," she said. "We know that our children suffered brain injury from vaccines, resulting in a diagnosis of autism."
Dr. DeStefano said he hopes the new study will help allay the concerns of parents and pregnant women.
During the last decade, thimerosal has been removed or reduced to trace amounts in vaccines routinely recommended for children in the U.S., with the exception of influenza vaccine. But parents can request doses of thimerosal-free influenza vaccine, said Dr. DeStefano, who has done research in the area for nine years.
"The results of our study indicate that concerns about a possible increased risk of autism from thimerosal-containing influenza vaccines are unfounded," he said.
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