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<blockquote data-quote="Rick Otto" data-source="post: 71010656" data-attributes="member: 5317"><p>Thank you for the opportunity to explain that Not all "anti" vaccine people are "anti-vaccine" per se.</p><p></p><p>By "reported history" (not actual history), I mean the manipulated information that becomes public opinion. </p><p>"<span style="font-size: 15px">Before the Salk vaccine became available, if you were admitted to the hospital any doctor could diagnose you with polio based on two physical examinations within 24 hours, to check for paralysis in one or more muscle groups. We now know that a number of viruses can cause paralysis, but back then, all instances were thought to be due to polio virus. When the polio vaccine was developed, a problem emerged. Swedish scientists were trying to tell the US scientists that formaldehyde inactivation was not going to work as planned.</span></p><p></p><p>Their warning, however, fell on deaf ears. This was unfortunate, as they turned out to be correct. Live poliovirus, which was put in an injectable vaccine, would appear to be inactivated right after it was made, but sometimes it would "resurrect" in the vial... In essence, the formaldehyde did not kill off all the polioviruses in these vaccines, which led to live polio viruses being injected. As a result, more people developed paralysis from the vaccine in 1955 than would have developed it from a wild, normal natural poliovirus.</p><p></p><p>Something had to be done to make it appear as though the vaccine was working. So what they did was change the diagnostic criteria for polio. Sadly this is a very common practice in medicine. When the observations don't fit your expectations, change or rig the system so that they do. With polio, the original criteria was two examinations within 24 hours. This was changed to two examinations within 60 days. This was helpful in cooking the books, because within 60 days, most people recover from their bout with poliomyelitis."</p><p></p><p>Check this out, please:</p><p><a href="http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2015/01/18/history-vaccination.aspx" target="_blank">Forgotten History of Vaccinations You Need to Be Aware Of</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rick Otto, post: 71010656, member: 5317"] Thank you for the opportunity to explain that Not all "anti" vaccine people are "anti-vaccine" per se. By "reported history" (not actual history), I mean the manipulated information that becomes public opinion. "[SIZE=4]Before the Salk vaccine became available, if you were admitted to the hospital any doctor could diagnose you with polio based on two physical examinations within 24 hours, to check for paralysis in one or more muscle groups. We now know that a number of viruses can cause paralysis, but back then, all instances were thought to be due to polio virus. When the polio vaccine was developed, a problem emerged. Swedish scientists were trying to tell the US scientists that formaldehyde inactivation was not going to work as planned.[/SIZE] Their warning, however, fell on deaf ears. This was unfortunate, as they turned out to be correct. Live poliovirus, which was put in an injectable vaccine, would appear to be inactivated right after it was made, but sometimes it would "resurrect" in the vial... In essence, the formaldehyde did not kill off all the polioviruses in these vaccines, which led to live polio viruses being injected. As a result, more people developed paralysis from the vaccine in 1955 than would have developed it from a wild, normal natural poliovirus. Something had to be done to make it appear as though the vaccine was working. So what they did was change the diagnostic criteria for polio. Sadly this is a very common practice in medicine. When the observations don't fit your expectations, change or rig the system so that they do. With polio, the original criteria was two examinations within 24 hours. This was changed to two examinations within 60 days. This was helpful in cooking the books, because within 60 days, most people recover from their bout with poliomyelitis." Check this out, please: [URL='http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2015/01/18/history-vaccination.aspx']Forgotten History of Vaccinations You Need to Be Aware Of[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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