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Vaccination

A Pretty Big Secret

Dan Olmsted UPI Senior Editor


CHICAGO, Dec. 7, 2005 (UPI) -- It's a far piece from the horse-and-buggies of Lancaster County, Pa., to the cars and freeways of Cook County, Ill.


But thousands of children cared for by Homefirst Health Services in metropolitan Chicago have at least two things in common with thousands of Amish children in rural Lancaster: They have never been vaccinated. And they don't have autism.

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50 Things Your Doctor Failed To Tell You about Vaccines

Gary Kohls, MD

March 6th 2008


"All the available evidence shows that the decline of the infectious diseases was due (not to the vaccines but) to social factors, hygiene, sanitation, housing, nutrition, etc."

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Polio: The Roots of the Story

Kris Gaublomme, MD


Polio is one of the last vaccines of what we could call ‘the first generation' of vaccines, together with smallpox, whooping cough and diphtheria. It is also one of the most difficult ones to criticize, because invariably a picture shows up of large hospital wards filled with iron lungs. "Is this what you want, then?: Are we against freeing the world from this old scourge by the blessing of vaccination, given to us by these brave scientists?

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Address of William Howard Hay, MD

William Howard Hay, MD

Pocono, PA., on June 25, 1937, before The Medical Freedom Society

December 21, 1937


MR. BURDICK. Mr. Speaker, under the leave to extend my remarks in the RECORD, I include the following address by William Howard Hay, M.D., of Pocono, PA., on June 25, 1937, before the Medical Freedom Society on the Lemke bill to abolish compulsory vaccination:

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Why You Should Avoid Taking Vaccines

James Howenstine, MD.

December 7, 2003


Dr. James R. Shannon, former director of the National institute of health declared, "the only safe vaccine is one that is never used."

Cowpox vaccine was believed able to immunize people against smallpox. At the time this vaccine was introduced, there was already a decline in the number of cases of smallpox. Japan introduced compulsory vaccination in 1872. In 1892 there were 165,774 cases of smallpox with 29,979 deaths despite the vaccination program. A stringent compulsory smallpox vaccine program, which prosecuted those refusing the vaccine, was instituted in England in 1867. Within 4 years 97.5 % of persons between 2 and 50 had been vaccinated. The following year England experienced the worst smallpox epidemic[1] in its history with 44,840 deaths. Between 1871 and 1880 the incidence of smallpox escalated from 28 to 46 per 100,000. The smallpox vaccine does not work.

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Statement of Rep. Dave Weldon, MD

Dave Weldon, MD

Introduction of H.R. 5887, The Vaccine Safety and Public Confidence Assurance Act of 2006 (USA)


July 26, 2006


Federal agencies charged with overseeing vaccine safety research have failed. They have failed to provide sufficient resources for vaccine safety research. They have failed to fund extramural research. And, they have failed to free themselves from conflicts of interest that serve to undermine public confidence in the safety of vaccines.

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Les Incompétents: My Open Letter to the American Academy of Pediatrics

K.P. Stoller, MD

April 2008


As a pediatrician, who has been a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) for two decades, I find the AAP's approach to the autism epidemic to be deeply disturbing. Not only have they allowed the myth of better diagnosing (as the reason for all the notice given to affected children) to be perpetuated, but when they were put on notice at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC's) Simpsonwood meeting in 2000, that the mercury in the preservative Thimerosal was causing speech delays and learning disabilities, they obfuscated and hid that information. They never made good on their 1999 pledge to have Thimerosal eliminated from vaccines and almost a decade later joined in the protest against a fictitious TV show (Eli Stone) because it was critical of mercury being in vaccines.

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Interview of an Ex-vaccine Researcher

Jon Rappoport, reporter


Jon Rappoport Q: You were once certain that vaccines were the hallmark of good medicine.


Dr. Mark Randall A: Yes I was. I helped develop a few vaccines. I won't say which ones.


Q: Why not?


A: I want to preserve my privacy.

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