Thursday, October 23, 2008

Lies My CDC Told Me

Drive-thru flu shots will serve as training exercise
by Penny L. Pool
Wednesday, October 22, 2008 9:23 AM CDT
The first drive-through flu shots in Randolph County will be given Thursday, Oct. 30, at the Randolph County Health Department on Main Street, but it is about far more than just preventing the flu.

Kathy Green, clinic nurse supervisor with the Health Department, said the county is joining the entire Area 6 in this practice run for a pandemic flu event. The worst pandemic flu event in 1918 and 1919 killed more than 50 million people worldwide.

The Health Department, along with the Roanoke Police Department and Randolph County Emergency Management Agency, will run this operation like a real crisis event. During the event all county residents can get a flu shot for $10 without leaving their vehicles.

Notice the main purpose of the flu shot campaign is an emergency exercise. Now notice this:

People need to remember the flu vaccine is not a live vaccine and cannot give you the flu. It takes about two weeks for the vaccine to be effective, she said.

So why do so many people get sick and even die from vaccines, especially flu vaccines?

Read the rest here.

Friday, October 17, 2008

If You Don't Know What's In It, Don't Do It!

New Jersey flu-shot
mandate for pre-schoolers draws outcry

As flu season approaches, many New Jersey parents are furious
over a first-in-the-nation requirement that children get a flu
shot in order to attend pre-schools and day-care centers. The
decision should be the parents', not the state's, they contend.
Hundreds of parents and other activists rallied outside the New
Jersey Statehouse on Thursday, decrying the policy and voicing
support for a bill that would allow parents to opt out of
mandatory vaccinations for their children. "This is not an
anti-vaccine rally - it's a freedom of choice rally," said one
of the organizers, Louise Habakus. 
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Nature Trumps Big Pharma Again

Ancient Chinese Salad Plant Transformed Into New Cancer-killing Compound
(Science Daily) -- Researchers at the University of Washington have updated a traditional Chinese medicine to create a compound that is more than 1,200 times more specific in killing certain kinds of cancer cells than currently available drugs, heralding the possibility of a more effective chemotherapy drug with minimal side effects.
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