Sep 222013
 

Viva Vaccines!

Vaccines are said to be the harbinger of good health: They have eradicated major ‘life-threatening epidemics’, ever since the first so-called successful vaccination was made. History asserts how large populations have survived and will continue to, thanks to this wonderful medical intervention. The press have always given more than their fair share of support for vaccines and so have the public at large, but should we really be that accepting? Not everyone is that accepting of vaccines. There have been many critics such as those in the medical profession. Care of the internet, more and more information comes slowly trickling through, challenging our faith in the vaccines religion.

In order to show that the picture painted of vaccines is not so glossy at all, it is necessary to go right back to the beginning of its history.

Edward Jenner (1749-1823)

The official front line puts Jenner down in history as a man who gave a great gift to the world, saving the lives of countless numbers through his medical breakthrough. He was the founder of vaccinations.

It was said that he made the first successful vaccination in his hometown of Berkley, Gloucestershire. The official biography goes on to say, Jenner knew that milkmaids did not die of the deadly smallpox disease because of protection given by the non-life threatening cowpox they had contracted from handling the udders of cows. He observed how the milkmaids had developed pustules on their fingers, a manifestation of cowpox. He thought that the pus would offer protection from smallpox.

So, for his first experiment (which is famous throughout the world), Jenner took the pus from the hand of a milkmaid and introduced it via two cuts he had made into the arm of a young boy called James Phipps. He made more pus introductions over the next few days. Then, to put his theory to the test, Jenner injected the boy with smallpox. At first, the boy was unwell, but after a matter of several days, he fully recovered, with no side effects seen.

-It has been said that a great discovery was made.

-Or was it?

The Truth about Edward Jenner

On closer inspection, the official frontline story differs greatly to what really happened. To give you an idea 8 ball pool cheat of the background, here are some of the biographical features you will not find in an orthodox medical textbook:

1. Jenner never passed an exam in his entire life.

2. He bought his doctor of medicine (MD) for just over £15 at St Andrews University, Scotland.

3. Later, Oxford University gave him another MD. His theory on vaccination was more than an influence on getting the qualification.

4. Having pulled a few strings, he was made a fellow of the royal society (FRS) for submitting a paper entitled ‘The Natural History of the Cuckoo!!’

5. click this site Qualified or unqualified, medical treatment in this era was nothing short of barbaric. Slashing veins for bloodletting, applying leeches, amputations and removing kidney stones (without anaesthetics and gangrenous infections frequently occurring as a consequence) were all common practices of the day, in which Jenner was ‘skilled’ at.

6. The principle behind vaccines, isopathy; giving someone an attenuated form of the disease to make the body produce antibodies against it and thus becoming immune was not a new idea. It can traced as far back as ancient Greece. Hence the famous saying by Hippocrates: ‘where there is illness there is also the cure.’

The truth behind the circumstances surrounding Jenner’s famous experiment on the young boy James Phipps and his claims to being the creator of the successful smallpox vaccine in 1796:

The first thing to realise is that most of Jenner’s medical contemporaries hotly disputed his claims. His was even ridiculed. A number of veterinarians would have told him that unlike the milkmaids he claimed to not contract smallpox, countless individuals did as a result of having had cowpox. Hence, Jenner or any other vaccinator never proved that cowpox gave immunity to smallpox in this era. Nor is there proof in any medical / pharmaceutical research institutions to this day. That means the whole basis for smallpox blitz brigade hack android vaccination remains fundamentally flawed.

In my research, I was astounded to find that, in later years a friend and colleague called John Baron MD wrote a kindly biography on Jenner, published in 1838 and in it, Baron recalls how Jenner and other medics at the time of trying to create a vaccine did not find that cowpox was capable of preventing smallpox. The biography goes on to say that this did not dampen his hopes in trying and find a solution, even if the cowpox infected milkmaids DID eventually get smallpox!

… To be contunued see part 2

 Posted by at 10:32 am

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