Saturday, 28 November 2009

  • All Vaccines Cause Hyperstimulation of the Immune System!

    All vaccines cause blood sludgging  from the hyperstimulation of the immune system which in turn cutts off red blood cells throughout the body's aproximately 60,000 cappilaries that carry all oxygenated blood to the brain and all organs.

    This is because the White Corpusels are three times or more larger than the oxygen carrying red blood cell which can only flow single file through the body's cappularies!  This causes Strokes and Dead areas called Ischemia to happen.

    This is a Medical Scientific Fact!

    No vaccines have ever been proven to work because it is an immpossibility in immuniology.

    This Vaccine Hoax by Big Pharmacy is for money only, Check it out and Superthink for yourself.

    Discover how the body defends itself against any disease and you will discover that the blood is the Last place your body's defenses will let any disease go yet vaccines but it there first.  Your food and how and when you eat it is what really matters!!!

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    Question from the Editors:

    Do YOU think Vaccines work?



Comments (62)

  • mathematicalbagpiper@xanga

    Not really. 

    I should expand: if you think modern medicines are designed to make you better, you are sadly, sadly mistaken. There's no money to be made in making people well. The money is to be made in keeping people sick, making them sicker, and making them need more drugs and medical intervention. 

    It's all about the money, honey. Big Pharma/FDA/Physicians are all about the money. They'd prefer everyone be sick all the time, and that's exactly what they're trying to do. 

  • rockstarbaby07080@xanga

    well, idk, but i know the h1n1 injected vacines are crap

  • alicec00per@xanga

    ...and how do you think diseases such as smallpox have disappeared, and
    have later appeared in people who hadn't had their vaccines? Maybe I'm
    missing the point of your post, but to me it sounds like you're
    overlooking so many things and are twisting facts to draw the
    conclusions you've decided you'd draw before you even started this
    blog.

    Also, I live a healthy lifestyle : without hitting the gym daily, I get
    my daily dose of exercise, I don't smoke, I eat out once every two
    weeks if that and usually, it isn't for a hamburger, pizza or any greasy, artery-clogging ish, and I'm lucky
    enough to have a chef as a father who cooks healthy, nutritious meals
    every day, yet I catch every illness out there. Swine flu, seasonal
    flu, name it, I've had it at least once. I have a runny nose during a
    good quarter of the year.

    If it isn't for the vaccines I've had, what has kept me from having the more serious illnesses out there considering my immune system has many days off? I'd like to hear it.

    It's one thing to think critically and to question everything, but to
    say vaccines do NOT work is something completely different and if you
    ask me, it's extremely silly. Most people who weren't vaccinated were protected by the people around them who have gotten their shots. If your entourage doesn't get ill, you're less likely to be in contact with certain viruses.

    But like I said, maybe I missed the whole point of your post, and if so, disregard this! :o

  • momtokaynjay29@xanga

    I don't think vaccines do work.They make you even sicker. That is why when I heard about about the H1N! and people were asking me if I were getting the vaccine I said no. They ask why and I just said I don't want to. I prefer to end up sick with it which I did get the Swine flu and it took me an extra week to feel better.

  • ashleyannaka@xanga

    I'd really like to see your source (other than your own brain). Do you know a lot about immunology?


    I have taken MANY science courses and have definitely been taught (and learned) otherwise. Vaccines DO work - we would not have eradicated smallpox and polio without them.


    I think you're being a little pessimistic.

  • turtletastic@datingish

    @ashleyannaka@xanga - Thank you.

    @momtokaynjay29@xanga - You talk like this because you have never lived in an age where people got sicknesses that killed them, like smallpox and polio. If vaccines don't work, why is it that we have eradicated these two diseases? Why do you no longer meet people who are paralyzed because they had polio?
    Because these vaccines make you sicker and give you worse forms of polio and smallpox?

    Oh wait, no, it's because we are vaccinated in our youth against these diseases.
    If you decide not to get the flu vaccine, that's your deal, your problem. But to say you'd rather just get sick than get a vaccine is ignorance. I'd like to see you get hepatitis or smallpox and just stay sick for a week longer.

  • yappy121@xanga

    According to your post, everyone  would have died from stroke (since almost everyone of us in North America has been vaccinated with at least 1 vaccine since we are born).....


    There are A LOT of misconception and misleading information in this post:
    - all blood cells are supposed to flow in single file inside capillaries (capillaries are elastic enough to allow their passage)
    - vaccines have been proven to work (of course, it doesn't work 100%)
    - all vaccines are aimed to stimulate the immune system (that's how you can make you body recognize the foreign pathogen and attack it)
    - not all vaccines are directly injected into the blood stream, in fact, a lot of the killed/inactivated/protein subunit vaccines are injected intramuscularly


    Seriously, know your immunology and virology, and reference published scientific articles before making such a big claim about vaccine.

  • taylorrrxx3@xanga

    Do you know anything about vaccinations? I highly doubt that none of them work. 

  • plump_Katz@xanga

    LOL
    Where is all this fear of vaccines stemming from? I understand it's only natural to question things you don't have enough information on, but is it really necessary to go on a full attack?

  • TheBaldShaolinGuy@xanga

    i wanna go to yer highschool and smack the principal for letting you graduate. why? because YOU sir, are an idiot.

  • Melissa___Dawn@xanga

    I seriously wish there were a vaccine to prevent STUPIDITY!!!!

  • Pcgecko85@xanga

    what are you? Amish? Please leave the Internet, you clearly do not deserve technology.

  • Unfettered_Mind@xanga

    Where the hell are the editors?  How do these posts get on AUTISABLE of all places?  It should at least be kicked to Healthkicker, where it's applicable.  I wish there were a "report a post for stupidity" option.

  • dodikins@xanga

    Getting sick also causes "hyperstimulation of the immune system." The vaccine exposes your body to the same exact things it would be exposed to upon infection by a microorganism or toxin. But whether it was a natural or artificial method of exposure, your body responds the same way by multiplying white blood cells and making antibodies. This is, in fact, what your immune system was designed to do. The difference is that the vaccine generally produces a much milder form of illness or infection, while still leaving memory cells which recognize the particular antigen responsible for the disease, so that your body can fend off future infections much more easily. Please learn how the immune system actually works before spouting your drivel. Your concern for vaccines and their side effects has been warped into something else entirely.

    You may choose not to get a vaccine, but consider this: It is the 98% of the rest of the population getting the vaccine which protects YOU from getting sick by that disease. This is called herd immunity. If you're not smart enough to choose to get vaccines yourself, I'd suggest at least keeping quiet so that other people don't stop getting their vaccines, thereby abolishing your own protection through them.

    @mathematicalbagpiper@xanga - "It's all about the money," really? That's incredibly insulting to the men and women who go into healthcare related fields and will most likely one day save your ass after you've eated one too many ho-hos, after crashing your car in an accident, or caring for your parent who has Alzheimer's. Learn some respect.

    Medicine is backed up by science, and what do you think led to the discovery of microorganisms cause diseases, and therefore the use of antiseptics prior to, say, making the first incision in a surgery? Would you rather someone cut you open with any old hacksaw and sewed you back up without a course of antibiotics?

  • Dargon@xanga

    To the OP: Sources, please

    To Healthkicker: What's with the anti-vaccination agenda lately?

  • mathematicalbagpiper@xanga

    @dodikins@xanga - Actually that will never happen. I have stated in my Advance Directive that I am to receive absolutely no medical treatment of any kind, routine or emergency. If it comes down to where I have a car accident and I'm laying there bleeding to death, they have to let me just sit there and bleed out. Seriously, that's how I have my AD set up, and how it will stay set up. Doctors can't do a damn thing to me, no matter the situation. 

    Yes, greedy. That's why they wouldn't work with me when I racked up $120,000 trying to get a diagnosis I found out later a 10-year-old could have diagnosed. Then they pump me full of drugs that only made me feel worse, instead of making me better. That's also why I got even with their sorry asses and declared bankruptcy on them, so I wouldn't have to pay them the money they didn't rightly deserve. 


    The only reason one becomes a doctor or a medical professional is for that fat paycheck. Nobody would put themselves through that much schooling for any other reason. 
  • Unfettered_Mind@xanga

    @mathematicalbagpiper@xanga - What about Doctors Without Borders?  That is definitely a not-for-profit organization that goes into the sorriest of places on this earth, and doctors with this organization definitely aren't concerned only for themselves and their paycheck.  They could make so much more money and enjoy much greater comfort staying here in the States or any other developed nation.

  • mathematicalbagpiper@xanga

    @Unfettered_Mind@xanga - Doctors Without Borders seems great on the outside, but it's really all part of something doctors do to make themselves look all altruistic so they get a good rep and people pay them money when they're done with that. 


    It's all to set them up, and it's still all about the money. 
  • dodikins@xanga

    @mathematicalbagpiper@xanga - I feel sorry for you that you haven't found anything you feel passionate enough about to invest so much in -- whether as a career or otherwise.

    I'm also sorry you've had a terrible experience with healthcare, but that does not give you the right to treat healthcare workers the way you do. At the end of the day, they do what they can to help others. They make mistakes. I'm sure you do, too; the only difference is, because you've chosen not to be responsible for other people, your mistakes don't really matter all that much. Well, somebody has to take care of the sick people, and you're clearly not doing it, so what exactly would you suggest?

    Yes, doctors make a lot of money. But there are plenty of healthcare workers who make significantly less than that, people who work 12+ hours shifts and who put up with some pretty shitty patient attitudes, but make less money than a kid fresh out of college working a laboratory job and a regular 9-5 schedule. A large paycheck is not undeserved. They paid a lot of money and spent a lot of time, energy, and effort to become highly educated, and if you think a 10 year old could have diagnosed you -- perhaps you should have gone to the 10 year old.

    And what Unfettered_Mind said about Doctors Without Borders. Or LIGA International. Or, I'm sure, many other organizations which do the same thing. You know nothing about the people you judge so harshly, and your bitterness and disdain are appalling.

    @mathematicalbagpiper@xanga - "Set them up" for what? They're already doctors. They already have the prestige and money which comes with the license.

  • mathematicalbagpiper@xanga

    @dodikins@xanga - I enjoy mathematics/mathematical research, but I'm not going to go to school for half of my life and spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to do it (luckily, it only requires 8 to 10 years and you can get through school mostly free). It doesn't make financial sense, as a mathematician's pay is pretty low. If the pay was low for doctors, we'd have no doctors, because it makes no financial sense. 

    Making a profit on people's misfortune is immoral, unethical, and wrong, and that's exactly what doctors do. When doctors renounce routine infant male genital mutilation as an unethical procedure, maybe I'll reconsider (as it offers no medical benefits and merely serves to make the sex life of men worse). 

    Furthermore, I suggest sick people take care of themselves, because they are more than capable of doing so. 


    They have the prestige and maybe some money, but if they make themselves look good, when they finish their tour, they'll be all that more prestigious and people will see them as a great human being, thus growing their patient base and making MORE MONEY. It's all part of a master plan. 
  • ManoAngeliukai9902@xanga

    At first, this posting made me think, Oh wow, how can someone be that much of a moron than to really think that this stuff is true?
    Then I realized, LOL, that the poster is playing around with people's minds.  Surely nobody can be that clueless, to state that vaccines haven't been proven to work.


    Remember, there are a lot of people on xanga (well, the internet in general) who enjoy spouting off stupidity in an attempt to make people cringe.  This post is merely one of those posts that try to rile feathers. 
    The majority of people do have the brain cells to know that vaccines are very much helpful in preventing certain illnesses. 
    I realize that some people choose not to take vaccinations or immunize my children.  I myself do vaccinate because I would hate for my children to die from an illness that can easily be prevented.  I'm a parent, and one of my many responsibilities is to keep them healthy.

  • ManoAngeliukai9902@xanga

    @Unfettered_Mind@xanga - Doctors Without Borders (and other similar organizations) are people whom I respect greatly, what they do is so very awesome.  I have read quite a few stories about the many cleft lip/palate surgeries that are performed in countries in need.  Those stories melt my heart, as my daughter (now 7 1/2) was born with a wide unilateral cleft lip/palate.  Her surgeon is one who, on occasion, performs surgeries out of the country, and back in '07 he and a colleague performed cleft lip/palate surgery on a young girl from Iraq.  She was around 11 years old at the time, I believe, and had endured some surgeries in Bagdhad, however, was still unable to eat/speak properly.  With my daughter's surgeon's help, her life was changed for the better.
    My daughter is doing well, has undergone 8 surgeries total so far, 7 of which were done before the age of 5.  Her next will be sometime next year at age 8, she'll begin pre-surgical orthodonture in April.  It makes for a stressful time, that's for sure, but we somehow manage.  She was a beauty at birth, of course, and is a shining light in our lives. 

  • ManoAngeliukai9902@xanga

    @dodikins@xanga - You are so right.  There are some very good doctors out there, as we all know.  I've had a couple of negative experiences in my life with a couple of doctors, but overall, the care that I've received by my physicians has been quite positive.  The ob/gyn who delivered my son not only saved my life, but his -- we both went into distress during labor/delivery, and without the emergency c/section, my husband would have lost both his wife and son.  Again, while laboring with my daughter, the ob/gyn saved her, she went into distress, the cord was wrapped around her leg.
    My daughter's oral/maxillofacial surgeon has been a great part of our family, the cleft lip/palate surgeries she has been undergoing since birth have been performed by him.  We met with him while I was still pregnant with her, and we found out at that time that Children's/Pittsburgh has one of the top 10 cleft/craniofacial teams in the nation. 
    My dad went through an ordeal with cancer, and his oncologist is one who was highly recommended by my niece's MIL, who had breast cancer quite a long time ago.  We're so grateful to him, without the treatments my dad received he wouldn't be here with us today. 


    Yes, there are some really good doctors out there. 

  • itsxeverlong@xanga

    we're exposed to bacteria on a daily basis. vaccines are nothing our body hasn't seen. this is bs

  • DAMN_itsz_KRYSIE@xanga

    I have always been told that vaccines really work! So of course I find it interesting that they are coming out with this new finding that vaccines are in fact harmful than helpful.


    If this is in fact true, then why are we all required to have vaccines?

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