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Who wants to be a millionaire?

If vaccines cause autism, why did this never show up before. Vaccines have been around since the 1920s at least. I never knew anyone who was autistic growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, why now? Have there been societal changes that could be affecting this? Is it because children are getting too many vaccines? Has the formulation changed, even before the doom covid shots? Our son had maybe 16 shots in total, from his infancy through his teen years and he never had any problems. I'm not saying th…

It is not that easy to create a vaccine that doesn't kill or maim on the spot, it is a fine (dark) art to create damage over time. Also, the rates of those diseases are much lower now because of better nutrition and sanitation, not vaccines. They still affect the poor and uneducated, living near garbage dumps etc., as they did before, but you don't get to hear about it.

Of course it's hard to make a decent, safe vaccine, that's why it takes 10 to 15 years to do it. We avoided the covid vaxx because we remembered, way, way back when they were trying gene therapy to help people with genetic diseases. They thought they could alter the DNA in a person and somehow, almost magically, it could be injected into them and all the cells of the body would transform. They tried it on a retarded teen and a man with ALS. Both died almost before the needle was out of their ar…

Yes, it takes 10 to 15 years to make a vaccine that doesn't draw suspicion, but the basic idea is flawed anyway. The immune system is much more than antibodies, and it is not lack of aluminum or mercury that makes it underperform. Thinking that toxins that have no place in the human body would somehow make it healthier is a flawed idea as well. But being ignorant to the ways of nature (nature being a form of technology anyway), there are arrogant idiots who think they can play God, messing with…

Well, considering that the child mortality rate during the 19th century was extremely high, I can see why people wanted to have some way to prevent the death of their children. When I was a child myself, a friend of mine had an old cemetery on her parents' property and one of the inscriptions from the 19th Century stuck with me: "She was the sunshine of our life until God took her from us." The little girl was 2 years old. Scientists were not trying to play God when they started developing vaccines, they were trying to stop children from dying. Isn't it quite possible that God gave these men the idea and help to develop vaccines, also?

2 Replies
Dec 18
at
1:35 PM