13 reasons to reject the Measles outbreak hype
Jon Rappoport
Activist Post
Sat, 14 Feb 2015
Hype a war, sell an invasion.
Hype a disease, sell a vaccine.
That's the business model. Make no mistake about it.
And at the criminal liar's club called the US Centers for Disease Control, men and women are working that business model every day.
Here are 13 reasons to reject the current hype about the "measles outbreak."
One: Above and beyond all other reasons is the CDC's track record of lying. There is no reason to believe anything they say or publish. And I mean anything.
For example, during the so-called Swine Flu epidemic of 2009, as Sharyl Attkisson reported for CBS News (10/21), the CDC stopped counting Swine Flu cases in America.
Stopped. Counting.
The real reason, as Attkisson discovered? Almost all the blood samples from likely Swine Flu patients in America, when sent to testing labs, showed no sign of Swine Flu or any flu.
For anyone who could see, the CDC was exposed as a complete and utter fraud. They were hyping the danger of the "epidemic" and the need for people to take the vaccine, based on zero evidence that there was an epidemic.
Then, WebMD reported on November 12, 2009: Shockingly, 14 million to 34 million U.S. residents — the CDC's best guess is 22 million — came down with H1N1 swine flu by Oct. 17, the six-month anniversary of the beginning of the pandemic ("22 million cases of Swine Flu in US," by Daniel J. DeNoon)
The CDC had plunged ahead and estimated there had been 22 MILLION cases of Swine Flu in America. Almost no evidence for any cases of Swine Flu=22 MILLION CASES.
Yes. It sounds impossible, but it happened.
You have to understand that the CDC is THE US reporting agency on numbers of cases and types of cases of disease.
So...believing anything the CDC says now about the "measles outbreak" is like believing someone who wants to sell you condos on the dark side of the moon.
Two: The CDC is in the business of promoting vaccines. That's how you make sense of such egregious lying. But that's not all. The CDC's budget includes huge money for the purchase of vaccines.
Here, from the HHS 2015 Budget in Brief—CDC Budget Overview, we have this statement:
Speaking of science, the CDC is also a research center, where many studies on vaccine safety and efficacy are conducted.
Do you expect that, while spending billions on the purchase of vaccines, the CDC will permit the publication of studies that conclude any of those vaccines (such as the measles vaccine) are unsafe and ineffective? Are you kidding?
Three: Regarding the current measles "outbreak" (a mere purported 150 cases, no deaths), where is the ironclad evidence that cases in more than a dozen states all stemmed from Disneyland—as opposed to occurring naturally in separate areas of the country?
Four: Where is the evidence that the current 150 cases of measles sprang from the natural wild measles virus, as opposed to the measles virus contained in the vaccine? Vaccinated children can shed and spread the measles virus in the vaccine to others.
Five: Among the potential adverse reactions to the measles vaccine is measles. Where is the proof that this has not happened?
Six: Where is the proof that the 150 cases of measles are all actually measles? For instance, conventional research indicates that an adenovirus (not the measles virus) can create the symptoms of measles.
Seven: Where are the lab tests (and which tests did they use?) to confirm that all the 150 current cases of measles are actually measles?
Eight: Children receive the measles vaccine as part of the MMR vaccine. As I've reported many times, there is a major scandal being covered up at the CDC regarding that vaccine.
CDC whistleblower, William Thompson, went public on August 27, 2014, in a written statement released through his whistleblower attorney, Rick Morgan.
Thompson, a long-time researcher at the CDC, confessed that he and his colleagues, Coleen Boyle and Frank DeStefano, omitted vital data from an MMR-autism study in 2004.
Omitting the damning data allowed the study, published in the journal Pediatrics, to conclude there was no connection between the MMR and autism—when there was a connection.
Nine: In 2014, 644 cases of measles were reported in the US. Where is the proof that these cases occurred in unvaccinated children?
Ten: It's clear in the case of the measles vaccine (and every vaccine) that proper standards of informed consent are being violated every day in the US. Doctors are not telling the parents of children about risks associated with the measles vaccine or about toxic substances contained in the vaccine. This violation is a crime.
Eleven: Most cases of measles are mild. Children recover without treatment. I see no studies analyzing the comparative nutritional levels of children who have mild vs. more serious cases of measles. This is an obvious area for analysis.
However, if the results showed that children with good nutrition tend to have milder measles, then the method of prevention would be obvious. Obvious and non-medical. Non-profit-making.
Twelve: What is in MMR vaccines? Aside from the measles/mumps/rubella viruses, the two current MMR vaccines contain a number of items, according to the CDC's Vaccine and Excipient and Media Summary.
You can look up the meanings of these items at vaccines.procon.org and other sites. Keep in mind, as you read the list, that these substances are injected into the bodies of children, thus bypassing several ordinary portals of immune-defense.
Or to put it another way, imagine a doctor telling a mother:
Thirteen: Back to the CDC's history of lying about disease, in order to promote vaccines.
Jon Rappoport
Activist Post
Sat, 14 Feb 2015
Hype a war, sell an invasion.
Hype a disease, sell a vaccine.
That's the business model. Make no mistake about it.
And at the criminal liar's club called the US Centers for Disease Control, men and women are working that business model every day.
Here are 13 reasons to reject the current hype about the "measles outbreak."
One: Above and beyond all other reasons is the CDC's track record of lying. There is no reason to believe anything they say or publish. And I mean anything.
For example, during the so-called Swine Flu epidemic of 2009, as Sharyl Attkisson reported for CBS News (10/21), the CDC stopped counting Swine Flu cases in America.
Stopped. Counting.
The real reason, as Attkisson discovered? Almost all the blood samples from likely Swine Flu patients in America, when sent to testing labs, showed no sign of Swine Flu or any flu.
For anyone who could see, the CDC was exposed as a complete and utter fraud. They were hyping the danger of the "epidemic" and the need for people to take the vaccine, based on zero evidence that there was an epidemic.
Then, WebMD reported on November 12, 2009: Shockingly, 14 million to 34 million U.S. residents — the CDC's best guess is 22 million — came down with H1N1 swine flu by Oct. 17, the six-month anniversary of the beginning of the pandemic ("22 million cases of Swine Flu in US," by Daniel J. DeNoon)
The CDC had plunged ahead and estimated there had been 22 MILLION cases of Swine Flu in America. Almost no evidence for any cases of Swine Flu=22 MILLION CASES.
Yes. It sounds impossible, but it happened.
You have to understand that the CDC is THE US reporting agency on numbers of cases and types of cases of disease.
So...believing anything the CDC says now about the "measles outbreak" is like believing someone who wants to sell you condos on the dark side of the moon.
Two: The CDC is in the business of promoting vaccines. That's how you make sense of such egregious lying. But that's not all. The CDC's budget includes huge money for the purchase of vaccines.
Here, from the HHS 2015 Budget in Brief—CDC Budget Overview, we have this statement:
"CDC's $4.8 billion immunization program has two components: the mandatory Vaccines for Children (VFC) program and the discretionary Section 317 program...In FY 2015, the Section 317 Immunization Program will continue to provide federally purchased vaccines to protect uninsured Americans from preventable diseases...CDC will work to...purchase and deliver vaccine for at-risk populations..."
If you buy tons of vaccines, the business model dictates you promote fear about the need for the vaccines; you promote "outbreaks" and "epidemics." It's just business, not science, not truth. Speaking of science, the CDC is also a research center, where many studies on vaccine safety and efficacy are conducted.
Do you expect that, while spending billions on the purchase of vaccines, the CDC will permit the publication of studies that conclude any of those vaccines (such as the measles vaccine) are unsafe and ineffective? Are you kidding?
Three: Regarding the current measles "outbreak" (a mere purported 150 cases, no deaths), where is the ironclad evidence that cases in more than a dozen states all stemmed from Disneyland—as opposed to occurring naturally in separate areas of the country?
Four: Where is the evidence that the current 150 cases of measles sprang from the natural wild measles virus, as opposed to the measles virus contained in the vaccine? Vaccinated children can shed and spread the measles virus in the vaccine to others.
Five: Among the potential adverse reactions to the measles vaccine is measles. Where is the proof that this has not happened?
Six: Where is the proof that the 150 cases of measles are all actually measles? For instance, conventional research indicates that an adenovirus (not the measles virus) can create the symptoms of measles.
Seven: Where are the lab tests (and which tests did they use?) to confirm that all the 150 current cases of measles are actually measles?
Eight: Children receive the measles vaccine as part of the MMR vaccine. As I've reported many times, there is a major scandal being covered up at the CDC regarding that vaccine.
CDC whistleblower, William Thompson, went public on August 27, 2014, in a written statement released through his whistleblower attorney, Rick Morgan.
Thompson, a long-time researcher at the CDC, confessed that he and his colleagues, Coleen Boyle and Frank DeStefano, omitted vital data from an MMR-autism study in 2004.
Omitting the damning data allowed the study, published in the journal Pediatrics, to conclude there was no connection between the MMR and autism—when there was a connection.
Nine: In 2014, 644 cases of measles were reported in the US. Where is the proof that these cases occurred in unvaccinated children?
Ten: It's clear in the case of the measles vaccine (and every vaccine) that proper standards of informed consent are being violated every day in the US. Doctors are not telling the parents of children about risks associated with the measles vaccine or about toxic substances contained in the vaccine. This violation is a crime.
Eleven: Most cases of measles are mild. Children recover without treatment. I see no studies analyzing the comparative nutritional levels of children who have mild vs. more serious cases of measles. This is an obvious area for analysis.
However, if the results showed that children with good nutrition tend to have milder measles, then the method of prevention would be obvious. Obvious and non-medical. Non-profit-making.
Twelve: What is in MMR vaccines? Aside from the measles/mumps/rubella viruses, the two current MMR vaccines contain a number of items, according to the CDC's Vaccine and Excipient and Media Summary.
You can look up the meanings of these items at vaccines.procon.org and other sites. Keep in mind, as you read the list, that these substances are injected into the bodies of children, thus bypassing several ordinary portals of immune-defense.
Or to put it another way, imagine a doctor telling a mother:
"I want to inject a whole list of chemical and biological substances into your young child. You don't mind, do you?"
The MMR vaccine ingredients/excipients: MSG, formaldehyde, neomycin, sorbitol, chick embryo cell culture, WI-38 human lung fibroblasts, sucrose, bovine calf serum, recombinant human albumin, hydrolyzed gelatin, MRC-5 cells, Medium 199, Minimum Essential Medium, sodium phosphate dibasic, sodium bicarbonate, potassium phosphate monobasic, potassium chloride, potassium phosphate dibasic. Thirteen: Back to the CDC's history of lying about disease, in order to promote vaccines.
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