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RFK Jr for HHS

Bc big pharma food and agg hate him and they dictate most policy and media at this point. At his core he's an environmentalist who also understands the root cause of the chronic disease epidemic in the country is a result of the toxins we're ingesting.
Despite his flaws as a human, if he is able to help improve the health of the country, it would be a very good thing.
He probably should have gone with some cod, a side salad and a glass of water. Not a good look. 😬

Oh, and that creepy garden gnome looking over his shoulder is more useless than tits on a tarantula.

 
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He probably should have gone with some cod, a side salad and a glass of water. Not a good look. 😬

Oh, and that creepy garden gnome looking over his shoulder is more useless than tits on a tarantula.

Oh I suspect that’s Johnson’s dinner.
 
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I don’t care how avid a health nut you are sometimes Ronny Mack’s Stewk House just hits the spot
 
Well, as an AF brat and world traveler. I have been ultra vaccinated. Typhus, cholera, typhoid every year. TB tests every six months. There was another one too, but I don’t remember what it was.

But that’s what they did back in the ‘60’s to the overseas brats.

I here’ s the interesting thing. After Covid we were talking about illnesses during that time period. None of had COVID, but we had a weird bronchial infection prior to Zcovid being known.

Since 2019, none of us have been sick.

Very weird indeed. We have opined that our “immunity” is the result of all those shots.

But until there’s a study or more, we’ll never know for sure.
Welcome back. Good to see you posting again.
 
The problem here is that to many of these people, the ethical issue was what his data indicates will cause more vaccine hesitancy which in their minds will potentially be harmful to kids. They discount the suspected potential harm that the vaccines themselves cause. As it always is with this issue, it's people leaving the costs out of the cost/benefit equation.

Since were talking about ethics, let's not forget the real issue at play here, the darker side of this which is you always follow the money. There is a lot of money in vaccines, both on the front side and on the back side with all the chronic issues they cause. In order to keep that money flowing, a sicker population is what is needed. This is their business model and it cannot be denied. If more practices follow suit with their own studies, that will be a threat to their profit margin, and thus you make an example out of Dr Thomas. These are all very easy concepts to grasp. Why do people have such an issue acknowledging it and incorporating it in their thought process?
 
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How many children in 2023 died from vaccines?

How many children in 2023 died from guns?

You want to fix something real maybe we should start here.
Blaah Blaah Blaah, time to put the guns bad argument to bed. The Supreme Court has ruled our guns aren't going anywhere and with a few more Trump appointees to the High Court we should be good for the next 200 years on that subject.

LOL
 
Then why are people so concerned about subjecting them to the same kind of medical trials that we do for other medicine?
What is the 'problem' with doing so?
Because that's all RFK Jr. has said.
He hasn't said there shouldn't be vaccines, he's simply said they should be tested like other medicine.
Why oppose that?
The delivery system has been tested. We have 75 years of data to support it. The mechanism is just triggering your body to do what it does on a daily basis anyway.
 
Can everybody see how this works?
Not a particular fan of the aaap, as they are one of the more political and less medical specialty societies, but…
1. Yes, docs get paid for vaccines and vaccinations. They also, of course, have costs. No mention of that in the screed. Because vaccines are not a gold mine for docs.
2. Yes, docs may get more general rate bumps or gain share payments for “good” behavior, which may include vaccinations. That is precisely what insurers should do, both to manage their in year actuarial risk, and also so so that’s not the only actuarial risk they’re considering (since people live, like, more than a year).
3. Interestingly while drug manufacturers provide pricing incentives to insurrrs, that practice is actually not that common for vaccines. Because the name of the game in vaccine works is just getting on the acip recommended vaccine list.
 
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There’s a big difference. The gun industry doesn’t work hand-in-hand with any government agency to hide gun deaths from the public like the pharmaceutical companies do with vaccines. You want to fix something maybe start there. :rolleyes:

1.1. International classification of diseases​

There are 130 official ways for an infant to die. These official categories of death, sanctioned by the World Health Organization (WHO) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), are published in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) [[1], [2], [3]]. When a baby dies, coroners must choose from among these 130 categories.
The official causes of death listed in the ICD include nearly every imaginable—and tragic—possibility. In fact, previous versions of the ICD listed "prophylactic inoculation and vaccination" as a separate cause-of-death category, with subcategories for deaths caused by specific vaccines. However, when the ICD was revised in 1979—and in subsequent updates to the ICD—all cause-of-death classifications associated with vaccination were eliminated. Since then, medical certifiers have been unable to list vaccination as an official cause of death because the ICD no longer contains a code for that possibility.

1.2. Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)​

Prior to the introduction of organized vaccination programs, "crib death" was so rare that it was not mentioned in infant mortality statistics. In the United States, national immunization campaigns were expanded in the 1960s when several new vaccines were introduced and promoted. For the first time in history, most U.S. infants were required to receive several doses of DPT (diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus), polio, and measles vaccines. (The measles vaccine was administered at 9 months of age from 1963 to 1965 [5]). Mumps and rubella vaccines were also introduced in the 1960s. By 1969, an alarming epidemic of sudden unexplained infant deaths impelled researchers to create a new medical term—sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) [6]. By 1972, SIDS had become the leading cause of post-neonatal mortality (infant deaths occurring between 28 days and 1 year of life) in the United States [7]. In 1973, the National Center for Health Statistics, operated by the CDC, created a new cause-of-death category to document deaths due to SIDS [8,9].

In 1992, the American Academy of Pediatrics(AAP) [13] came up with a plan to reduce the unacceptable SIDS rate while reassuring concerned mothers and fathers that sudden unexplained infant deaths were not related to vaccines. The AAP initiated a national "Back to Sleep" campaign, telling parents to place their infants supine, rather than prone, during sleep. From 1992 through 2001, post-neonatal SIDS declined by an average annual rate of 8.6 % [9]. It seemed as though the "Back to Sleep" campaign was successful and that the real cause of SIDS was due not to vaccinations but from babies sleeping on their bellies.
However, a closer inspection of the ICD—the 130 official ways for an infant to die—revealed a loophole. Medical certifiers, such as coroners, could choose from among several categories of death when a baby suddenly expired. They didn't have to list the death as SIDS.

The trend toward reclassifying sudden infant deaths under alternate ICD codes is an ongoing concern. From 1999 through 2015, the U.S. SIDS rate declined 35.8 % while infant deaths due to accidental suffocation increased 183.8 %. According to Lambert et al. [17], "There is evidence of a continuing diagnostic shift between SUID subtypes," but "there has been little change in overall SUID rates since 1999."

In 1978–1979, 11 babies in Tennessee died within 8 days following DPT vaccination [43]. Five of the babies died suddenly within 24 h of vaccination. Nine of the 11 babies had received their vaccine from the same lot. A subsequent investigation confirmed a greater than expected relationship between Lot #64201 of the DPT vaccine and SIDS. Initially, health authorities "did not feel that a causal relationship could be totally excluded." Later, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a revised statement that "experts…did not find evidence of a cause-effect relationship." Finally, the CDC claimed that the SIDS cases in Tennessee that occurred shortly after DPT vaccination were all a "coincidence." (After this incident, internal memos by the vaccine manufacturer revealed a new policy of limiting shipments of DPT vaccine so that no geographical location would receive all of the product from a single lot, confounding the ability to trace hot lots that might cause clusters of SIDS cases post-vaccination.)




Please read this Quote from research on history of Science Digest. Pay attention to the pseudoscience and UFO reference. This is typical of Michealfeller's conspiracy theory references.

"In November 1980 the magazine was expanded to an 11 x 8 inch glossy page format with full-length articles and color pictures targeted at a college-educated reader.[2] The new version was largely the creation of its then editor Scott DeGarmo. It was issued bi-monthly with circulation of about 500,000 copies. At first it tended to favor breathless cover lines, and often turned to pseudoscience topics, including spontaneous human combustion and UFOs. Unable to compete with more serious publications, such as Discover and Omni, the magazine ceased publication in 1986.

[4]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Digest
 
Please read this Quote from research on history of Science Digest. Pay attention to the pseudoscience and UFO reference. This is typical of Michealfeller's conspiracy theory references.

"In November 1980 the magazine was expanded to an 11 x 8 inch glossy page format with full-length articles and color pictures targeted at a college-educated reader.[2] The new version was largely the creation of its then editor Scott DeGarmo. It was issued bi-monthly with circulation of about 500,000 copies. At first it tended to favor breathless cover lines, and often turned to pseudoscience topics, including spontaneous human combustion and UFOs. Unable to compete with more serious publications, such as Discover and Omni, the magazine ceased publication in 1986.

[4]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Digest
That’s cool. But I didn’t link anything from Science Digest, whatever that is.

I linked information from sciencedirect.com, instead. :rolleyes:
 
Pretty good stuff from Lyz Lenz this week:



This week, America achieved dingularity.

Dingularity is a term first coined in 2023 and describes a naturally occurring phenomenon that happens when too many dinguses get together and the time-space continuum collapses, creating a black hole of idiocy, which sucks life and meaning and irony from the world. In sum, the dingularity.
This week, every news alert was basically, “Donald Trump will appoint the fox to watch the hen house.”
  • Hans Gruber is Trump’s pick to be Secretary of Commerce.
  • That serial killer from the movie SE7EN has been picked to oversee the US Postal Service. WHAT’S IN THE BOX?!
  • Agatha Trunchbull has been chosen as Secretary of Education.
  • The guy who had brain worms and hates vaccines is now the pick for Health and Human Services.¹
  • Megatron is now Secretary of Homeland Security
  • Miss Hannigan is going to be the Secretary of Labor.
  • That toxic waste from one of the final scenes of RoboCop is Secretary of Energy.
  • The Duttons (all of them) are in charge of Housing and Urban Development.
  • And a new department called Puppies has been created which will, of course, be led by Cruella de Vil.
 
Pretty good stuff from Lyz Lenz this week:



This week, America achieved dingularity.

Dingularity is a term first coined in 2023 and describes a naturally occurring phenomenon that happens when too many dinguses get together and the time-space continuum collapses, creating a black hole of idiocy, which sucks life and meaning and irony from the world. In sum, the dingularity.
This week, every news alert was basically, “Donald Trump will appoint the fox to watch the hen house.”​
  • Hans Gruber is Trump’s pick to be Secretary of Commerce.
  • That serial killer from the movie SE7EN has been picked to oversee the US Postal Service. WHAT’S IN THE BOX?!
  • Agatha Trunchbull has been chosen as Secretary of Education.
  • The guy who had brain worms and hates vaccines is now the pick for Health and Human Services.¹
  • Megatron is now Secretary of Homeland Security
  • Miss Hannigan is going to be the Secretary of Labor.
  • That toxic waste from one of the final scenes of RoboCop is Secretary of Energy.
  • The Duttons (all of them) are in charge of Housing and Urban Development.
  • And a new department called Puppies has been created which will, of course, be led by Cruella de Vil.
Bitter feminist should stick with writing bitter, feminist tripe.

Comedy’s not for everyone.
 
GcumnY-W0AE8yVQ
 
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