Neil Miller
[back] Vaccine critics

Website http://thinktwice.com

Articles
Annual Flu Deaths: The Big Lie By Neil Z. Miller Every year, just prior to the impending "flu season," the CDC and their acquiescent media pawns terrorize the American public with false claims regarding annual flu deaths. The CDC boldly asserts that 36,000 people die every year from the flu. Such scare tactics are calculated to increase flu vaccine sales. However, according to the CDC's own official records documented in National Vital Statistics Reports, only a few hundred people die from influenza (flu) on an average year. And many of these deaths occur in people with preexisting conditions, weakened immune systems, and the elderly

[doc 2004] The polio vaccine: a critical assessment of its arcane history, efficacy,and long-term health-related consequences by Neil Z. Miller

Short e books
[pdf] Aluminum in Vaccines by Neil Miller
[pdf] Overdosed babies by Neil Miller

Books:
[2008] Vaccine Safety Manual for Concerned Families and Health Practitioners: Guide to Immunization Risks and Protection by Neil Z. Miller
1992   Vaccines: Are They Really Safe And Effective? ISBN 1881217108   Forward by two M.D's.
1995   Vaccine Roulette: Gambling With Your Child's Life ISBN 1881217094
1995   Vaccine Seminar ISBN 1881217086
1996   Immunisation: Theory vs Reality    ISBN 1881217124   Forwards by Lendon Smith, M.D., Serafina Corsello, M.D., and Viera Scheibner, Ph.D.
1996   Immunizations: The People Speak! ISBN1881217167
2003   Vaccines, Autism and Childhood Disorders ISBN 1881217329 

Biography (supplied by Think Twice)

Neil Z. Miller is a medical research journalist and natural health advocate. He is the author of numerous articles and books on vaccines, including Vaccines: Are They Really Safe and Effective?

(updated and revised 2004), Vaccines, Autism and Childhood Disorders (2003), Immunizations: The People Speak! (1996), and Immunization Theory Versus Reality (1995). He is a frequent guest on radio and TV talk shows, including Donahue and Montel Williams, where he is often seen and heard debating doctors and other health officials. Mr. Miller has a degree in psychology, is the director of the Thinktwice Global Vaccine Institute (www.thinktwice.com), the publisher of New Atlantean Press, and is a member of Mensa, the international high-IQ society. He lives in Northern New Mexico with his family.

Mr. Miller began his crusade against mandatory vaccines when his son was born. Very little data could be found on this topic. His search for the truth led him to scientific journals. There he discovered numerous studies warning medical practitioners that vaccines are often unsafe and ineffective. His shock and anger at the suppression of this information culminated in his passionate advocacy of health freedom and informed parenting options.

Neil Miller is a health pioneer who presented documentation about vaccine safety and efficacy problems long before these concerns were made public. For example, several years ago he complained about toxic mercury inserted in childhood vaccines, revealed correlations between the MMR vaccine and severe neurological complications, and provided evidence linking vaccines and autism. During the past decade, cases of autism skyrocketed by more than 500 percent in countries that use mercury-laced vaccines or MMR. In some parts of the United States, one of every 150 children is autistic. Recently, Congress commanded the FDA to remove mercury from vaccines, and new studies by several world-renowned scientists confirmed an MMR-autism link. Despite the many problems uncovered in Mr. Miller’s research, he does not tell parents to reject the shots:

Every year, more than 12,000 people in the United States contact the FDA to report serious adverse reactions to mandated vaccines. (Many of these reactions occur in children.) The FDA estimates that this represents just 10 percent of the true rate. Yet, even these figures pale in comparison to the number of cases of new diseases now being scientifically linked to compulsory inoculations: MMR and autism, polio vaccines and cancer, the hepatitis B vaccine and multiple sclerosis, the Hib vaccine and diabetes, to name just a few. For these reasons, among others, I am opposed to mandatory vaccines. I do not recommend for or against the shots. I want everyone to think through this enigmatic and controversial subject on their own. I believe that parents are capable of obtaining the facts and making knowledgeable choices regarding the care and welfare of their children.

Mr. Miller has publicly debated the pros and cons of mandatory vaccines with several pediatricians and other health practitioners, including the chief medical epidemiologist for the National Immunization Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). He conducts lectures throughout the United States and is available to discuss his research on vaccines.