Vaccinations and my daughter

Ah good old squalene. I hope you cleaned your mouse and keyboard today. It is covered in it. Did you know that squalene is that oil that you leave behind in the form of fingerprints? If you have ever eaten with your fingers or touched your food, you have ingested it- and in higher quantities that you would get from a vaccination. Your liver produces it and it is found throughout your body. You can even buy squalene supplements in health food stores. This is a major risk factor I guess. http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/10/squalene-not-to-worry/

Eating/touching squalene is not the same as injecting it directly into the blood stream.

Sorry, but this earns a substantial DUH.
 
The point was that it is already in your body and cells- in higher quantities than you would receive in a vaccination- assuming it was in vaccines in the US which it is not. It is not harmful.
 
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If that quote is real she just shot herself in her own foot. Polio != meningitis. An obvious crackpot.

Re-read her quote. She didn't say that Polio=meningitus, she said that 30,000-50,000 cases of Polio were simply called meningitus in order to skew the statistics.
 
It is her opinion that they were all misdiagnosis. Unless she examined all the cases (or can cite somebody who has). Her education is in geology and her PhD is in micropalentology- not medicine. She has also tried to claim that vaccines include "brain eating amoebas". http://www.whale.to/vaccines/amoebas.html

A 1977 survey by the National Health Interview estimated 254,000 people living in the US who had been paralized by polio. Other estimates go as high as 600,000.

In 1988, there were 350,000 cases of polio reported world wide. After a massive vaccination program where 450 million world wide were vaccinated, global cases dropped to 7,000 by 1999- just eleven years later. Were these all merely "viral meningitis" now? http://www.cloudnet.com/~edrbsass/poliotimeline.htm

So what about viral meningitis? http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/1168529-overview
Currently, more than 85% of viral meningitis cases are caused by nonpolio enteroviruses. Disease characteristics, clinical manifestations, and epidemiology generally mimic those of enteroviral infections.
So, yes, they do test for the source and it is rarely polio.

http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/encephalitis_meningitis/detail_encephalitis_meningitis.htm
Viral, or aseptic, meningitis is the most common form of meningitis in the United States. This typically mild and non-lethal disease is usually caused by enteroviruses—common viruses that enter the body through the mouth and travel to the brain and surrounding tissues where they multiply. Enteroviruses are present in mucus, saliva, and feces and can be transmitted through direct contact with an infected person or an infected object or surface. Other viruses that cause meningitis include varicella zoster (the virus that causes chicken pox and can appear decades later as shingles), influenza, mumps, HIV, and herpes simplex type 2 (genital herpes).

Many fungal infections can affect the brain. The most common form of fungal meningitis is caused by the fungus cryptococcus neoformans (found mainly in dirt and bird droppings). Cryptococcal meningitis is common in AIDS patients. Although treatable, fungal meningitis often recurs in nearly half of affected persons
 
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Just last week I got our pediatrician to admit that giving a hep-b vaccine to an infant was both unnecessary and not worth the risks involved. Upon agreeing upon that, I asked, "why do you recommend it then?" to which he replied, "because that is what we are supposed to do"....

wow
 
"because that is what we are supposed to do"

ah, well yeah it sounds "shocking" but at the same time I just chalked that one up to mal-practice insurance. ie: no doctor is gonna lose a lawsuit from recommending the vaccination. doctoring via the CYA method.....
 
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ah, well yeah it sounds "shocking" but at the same time I just chopped that one up to mal-practice insurance. ie: no doctor is gonna lose a lawsuit from recommending the vaccination.

i guess i retract my wow. that makes sense. stupid government interventions.
 
Just last week I got our pediatrician to admit that giving a hep-b vaccine to an infant was both unnecessary and not worth the risks involved. Upon agreeing upon that, I asked, "why do you recommend it then?" to which he replied, "because that is what we are supposed to do"....

(ditto) Wow - powerful admission, that!
 
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