Synopsis
This book provides parents with a comprehensive, scientifically-based
guide to the facts, myths, problems and solutions associated with raising a
vaccine free child. It helps parents protect their children both from the
wiles of the vaccine industry and from harmful germs. With 471 references,
there are no trendy anti-vaccination myths in this book. Readers will learn
that immunisation is not the reason for the absence of some infectious
diseases, that insidious, long-term side effects are very common, and that
there is a media blackout on the topics of vaccine side effects and vaccine
failures.
Health conscious parents are wary of the side effects of vaccines, but
they also fear the infectious diseases to which babies and young children
can fall victim. This book equips parents with the knowledge they need to
cope with both the tactics of the vaccine industry, and with the very real
threat from infectious diseases.
Each infectious disease has different characteristics, and each needs to
be approached in an individual way. Understanding the difference between the
self-resolving childhood illnesses and the ones that need intervention is
the first step to knowing how to deal with infectious diseases. This book
advises parents on how to bring children safely through childhood illnesses
like measles and whooping cough, and discusses medical and non-medical
prevention and treatment of the non-childhood infectious diseases.
Parents who choose to keep their children vaccine free are often accused
of being selfish because they want to avoid the risk of side effects, while
allowing their children to be protected by the fact that other children have
been vaccinated. The idea that vaccinating some children prevents disease in
all children is called herd immunity. The myth of herd immunity is used as a
political tool by people who want to bully unwilling parents into
vaccinating. The information in this book enables parents of vaccine free
children to withstand the accusation that they are spoiling herd immunity.
Bureaucrats often make statements about the safety and effectiveness of
vaccination that are not supported by fact. The author has given some of
these bureaucrats the opportunity to provide evidence to support their
claims, but they have not been able to provide the evidence because their
claims are wrong.
A look at the early documents regarding vaccination reveals that it is an
unscientific procedure that is based on falsehood, cruelty and supposition.
Contents
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER ONE: "The benefits of vaccination are worth
the risks"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER TWO: "Side effects are rare"
- The crucial difference between childhood illnesses and
malevolent infectious diseases
- The risk from infectious diseases
- Fever is a friend
- The theory that childhood diseases are beneficial
- "But children die of measles"
- Sick children need care
- Caring for a child with;
- Infantum roseola
- Measles
- Mumps
- Rubella
- Whooping cough
- Chicken pox
- Slapped cheek roseola
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER THREE: "When vaccinated children get the
disease that the vaccine was supposed to prevent, they get it less
badly"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER FOUR: "Diphtheria declined because of mass
vaccination"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER FIVE: "Without vaccination there would be
epidemics"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER SIX: "If enough people are vaccinated, the
disease will die out"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER SEVEN: "Immunity can be measured by the
density of antibodies in the blood"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER EIGHT: "The vaccine failed because..."
- Thirteen Excuses for vaccine failures
- Excuses for the failure of measles vaccine
- When whooping cough vaccine fails
- Excuses for the failure of polio vaccine
- Cover up of the failure of rabies vaccine
- Excuses for the failure of BCG vaccine
- How homoeopathy works
- Some pointers regarding the prevention and treatment of
malevolent infectious diseases
- TB (Tuberculosis)
- Polio
- Tetanus
- Diphtheria
- Cholera
- Typhoid
- Typhus
- Hepatitis B
- Rabies
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER NINE: "Smallpox was eradicated by
vaccination"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER TEN: "Louis Pasteur defeated rabies"
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER ELEVEN: "Vaccines are scientifically tested
for safety and effectiveness"
- The testing of DPT vaccine
- A vaccine trial in New Zealand
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER TWELVE: "The effectiveness and side effects
of vaccines are monitored after they are introduced"
- A case of mass pathological denial
- Reliance on passive reporting
- Ignoring contra-indications
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER THIRTEEN: "Scientific research has proven
that vaccination does not increase the risk of SIDS"
- A convenient escape chute
- Sham studies
- Circumstantial evidence
- Crime, autism and learning disabilities
- Medical malice
- The origin of AIDS
- Intimidation and the law
- Coping with disapproval
- Treating vaccine damage
- The thuja myth
- VACCINE MYTH NUMBER FOURTEEN: "Homoeopathic vaccination can be
used as a substitute for biological vaccination"
- CONCLUSION
- REFERENCES
Excerpts
When discussing the risks versus the benefits of vaccination, it is
important to make a clear distinction between the two categories of
infectious disease. These are childhood diseases and malevolent diseases.
The issue of vaccination becomes muddled if the two categories of disease
are lumped together, because childhood diseases are very different to
malevolent infectious diseases. Childhood diseases affect the immune system
in a way that makes most people immune to the disease for the rest of their
lives, but the malevolent infectious diseases do not do this. Vaccination is
a partial copy of a natural infection, so when the germs of childhood
diseases are injected into the blood stream, they create an artificial
immunity that wears off and allows the person to catch the disease later on
in life. There is a higher rate of complications with these diseases in
older people. When the germs of malevolent diseases are used for
vaccination, they do create antibodies, but that is not the same thing as
creating immunity.
The incidence of whooping cough has been decreasing for more than a
hundred years, which means that very few children get it nowadays. Your
child might be the one who gets it, so you need to know what to do to keep a
child with whooping cough comfortable and safe.
The first two weeks of whooping cough seem like a bad cold with mild
fever and occasional fits of coughing. Suddenly the cough becomes more
intense, and the child starts waking at night with spasms of coughing. When
you hear that first "whoop" you know that whooping cough has arrived and it
cannot be ignored. It is time to batten down the hatches and get ready for
broken nights and long days.
Two things make whooping cough more bearable; a firm resolve and a
plastic bowl. The first few whoops are alarming to observe, but you soon get
used to them. If you panic you make the child tighten up and gasp all the
more. Whooping cough is far worse for the parents than for the child. The
sooner you settle into a happy routine of throwing up and cleaning up, the
easier it will be for the family. (The child does the throwing up, you do
the cleaning up.)
The coughing spasms are not glamorous affairs. The eyes bulge and the
breath is pulled in through a constricted throat, causing that awful whoop
sound. At the end of each spasm the child vomits up thick mucous, and
sometimes food. Between spasms he or she sleeps soundly, or is cheerful and
chirpy. Whooping cough does not cause the grumpiness that measles and mumps
cause.
Don't underestimate the potential of mumps to cause long term damage. A
child must stay indoors and get a lot of rest to avoid complications. An
adult with mumps is even more vulnerable to complications. Mumps affects the
salivary glands so that the jowls swell up and the person looks hilarious.
The virus can also cause inflammation in the pancreas, the ovaries, the
testicles, the brain and the ears. Sterility, brain damage or deafness can
result from improper care of a person with mumps.
By affecting the pancreas, the virus can cause diabetes. This was first
documented in 1899. The ovaries and testicles cannot be damaged in a person
who has not yet reached puberty, which is one good reason for getting mumps
over with in childhood.
An adult male is the most vulnerable to mumps, because men find it
difficult to rest in bed for a few days. While trying to persuade me that
vaccinating my children against mumps would be a good idea, a neighbour told
me about a famous New Zealand athlete who developed encephalitis from mumps
and was left partially paralysed. When I pressed him for details, it emerged
that the athlete had run a race while the mumps was acute. Once upon a time
people knew that they must not run a race when they have mumps.
When her condition became serious, she was admitted to hospital, where
her aunt came to visit her. Her aunt had nursed diphtheria cases in Britain
in the 1950s, and she said that her niece had the typical symptoms of
diphtheria. The girl was flown by helicopter to a bigger hospital in
Auckland, where they took a swab from her throat and confirmed diphtheria.
When they learned that the girl was fully immunised, one of the doctors said
to the mother, "Then it can't be diphtheria." They changed the diagnosis to
bacterial tracheitis.
The belief in herd immunity leads to many delusions. One of them is that
when the number of immune people in a community drops below a certain point,
it will make the next epidemic come sooner. In 1976 in Britain the
vaccination rate for whooping cough dropped from 76% to 42%, because there
had been publicity of bad side effects from the vaccine. The medicrats
expected that the drop in the vaccination rate would make the next whooping
cough epidemic come sooner, as well as expecting it to be worse. The
whooping cough bacteria paid no attention to human theories, and the disease
followed the usual timing of its natural cycle of virulence. Medicrats
expressed surprise that the epidemic did not come sooner. There were also
fewer cases and fewer deaths during this epidemic. The much lower
vaccination rate of 42% made no difference to the long term decline of
whooping cough, which had been happening for a hundred years.
In 1989 the American Immunization Practices Advisory Committee announced
that some contra-indications were not really contra-indications to
vaccination. I wrote and asked this committee for evidence to support their
stance, and they sent me 18 references. Some of these references were
non-existent, some were smoke-screens, and some were just off the point.
These American bureaucrats have persuaded health departments around the
world to ignore contra-indications, and to vaccinate babies who are known to
be at risk of suffering bad side effects.
An example of the callous irresponsibility of modern medical officials is
that they recommend that premature babies should be vaccinated according to
their date of birth, not according to their gestational age. A proper study
was eventually done in 2001, and it found that premature babies are very
susceptible to suffering from serious vaccine reactions.