Will Flu Vaccinations Put You at Risk for Brain Injury?
Russell Blaylock, MD (neurosurgeon)
August 13, 2009
Vaccines are not all they appear to be. According to the vaccine promoters, they are the greatest — and safest — advance in disease control the world has ever known. But is that true? Did vaccines really stop the scourge of childhood infections? Or can vaccines actually destroy your health? (Go here for my special report "Vaccinations: The Hidden Dangers.)
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Bogus Study Claims Gardasil is Safe
William Campbell Douglass I.I., MD
August 31, 2009
There's so many conflicting reports floating around about Gardasil that it can be tough for parents to know what to believe. A recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association only clouds the issue even further. The study claims that Gardasil's side effects are rare and continue to occur at the same rate they did in the clinical trials. What they don't tell you is that those trials were a sham.
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Vaccination Is Not Immunization
Leo Rebello, MD, ND, PhD
Immunity is inbuilt -- it may be weak, medium or strong. If weak it can be built. For healthy immunity your blood should be 70% alkaline and 30% acidic. But because of the wrong food that we eat day in and day out this ratio is in inverse proportion. Impure blood then destroys the immunity and internal organs creating dis-ease state.
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There Is No Vaccine Against Ignorance
Leo Rebello, MD, ND, PhD
Like formal education stunts the mental growth of a child; Like religions stunt the spiritual growth of an individual; Vaccinations and Drugs stunt the growth of the wondrous human body. Stay Free from this Unholy Trinity.
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Autism Spectrum Disorder has Risen to New Heights
Joseph Mercola, DO
September 10 2009
A pair of studies on autism rates show that somewhere around one percent of all U.S. children currently have an autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The rate is even higher among 6 to 11 year olds and among boys. Among all children aged two to 17, one in 100 currently have an ASD, which is considerably higher than the previously estimated rate of one in 150. There was a 100 percent increase in parent-reported ASD rates compared to 2003. One possible explanation for some of the increase is the expansion of the ASD classification within the public schools to include not only full-blown autism, but also milder forms of ASD such as Pervasive Developmental Disorder and Asperger's Syndrome. But it is difficult to believe that this accounts for the entire increase. One possible answer is the Hepatitis B vaccine, which also contained 25 micrograms of mercury containing thimerosal. Only 8 percent of infant children received the Hep B vaccine in 1992, when that birth cohort showed an ASD rate of 60 per 10,000. By 1994, the number of children receiving Hep B vaccine had reached just 27 percent -- and the cohort showed an ASD rate of 66 per 10,000. The Hep B coverage rate rose to 82 percent by 1996, when that cohort's ASD rate exploded to around 100 per 10,000, or one in 100.
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Flu Vaccines and the Risk of Cancer
Sherri Tenpenny, DO
September 4, 2009
Much concern has been generated over the upcoming new swine flu H1N1 vaccines that are being rushed to market. Clinical trials will be short – less than three weeks – and the potential for the addition of toxic oil-in-water adjuvants to be added at the last minute to stretch the vaccine supply is disconcerting. However, the problems with flu shots go beyond current concerns. The new manufacturing process for flu shots, called cell-line technologies, are little understood and have the potential for serious, long term consequences.
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Why Current Thinking About Autism Is Completely Wrong
Mark Hyman, MD
September 5, 2009
"Autism is caused by poor mothering." That was the belief of the medical community until the late 1960s.
"Autism is a genetic brain disorder." That is what most people -- and most of the medical community -- believe today.
I'm here to tell you that neither one of these statements is true.
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Swine Flu and the Swine Flu Vaccine
Lynn Jennings, MD
August 31, 2009
September has always signaled the end of summer vacation and the beginning of a new school year. In Michigan, where I grew up, the school year always began the week after Labor Day. (It also corresponded with the new fall lineup of shows on TV, three channels, no such thing as cable). As a physician, I am aware of the seasonal trends of illness. Within a few weeks of the start of the new school year, I could always count on the increase in sore throats, coughs and colds. When you put a large group of people (children) in close contact with one another, a lot of germs get spread around. And that brings me to the topic I would like to discuss, the H1N1 virus more commonly known as the "swine flu virus." This article was prompted by an evening web seminar that was presented by Dr. Sherri Tenpenny a few weeks ago. The information was startling. I decided that this information needed to be passed on.
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