What is important to know is that vaccines can be a double-edged sword. That is to say, they can cause serious side effects including, but not limited to, complications in the form of appendicitis. So, the best that you can do is to be aware of this and take precautions.
In the same video, Arkane’s Chris has an interesting story for the news: that of a woman who got very sick from her vaccines for chickenpox. The woman developed an appendicitis attack, which is a serious complication and will require surgery. At no point throughout the video or the video trailer did Chris say that the woman’s vaccination caused her any sort of harm.
As we know from the CDC, vaccines can cause a number of different sorts of illness. But the CDC also says that their studies show that the chance of developing a serious illness from a vaccine is extremely small. The CDC’s website has a page dedicated to this topic.
The official line about vaccines is that the vaccines they develop for specific diseases are tested on human beings before they are used in the US. The CDC is a government agency, not a medical organization, so their statements are all about what is true for their own agency. But there’s nothing to say that because they’ve made a lot of money from vaccines, they don’t have to be consistent with what the rest of the world says about them.
The truth of the matter is that in the CDCs history, there are many cases of people who were sickened by vaccines and died because of them. They have no guidelines or protocols on what to test for so if they do test for it, it is usually a false positive. They only test for the diseases that are on their list of suspect vaccines, not the ones that are confirmed.
In the case of the CDCs list of suspect vaccines, vaccines like measles, varicella, diphtheria, and pertussis are on there. The problem is almost all of them are on vaccines that have been around for decades. The other problem with the CDCs list of suspect vaccines is that not all of them have been confirmed. The CDC uses this list because it gives them a way to get a list of things that other researchers have found to be dangerous for vaccines.
The problem with the CDCs list is that it’s based on a lot of studies that have never been peer-reviewed, and therefore have never been subjected to the scientific rigor that should be applied to them. There have been, and are, many studies done that have been rejected for various reasons.
The truth is that we don’t know for sure if vaccines to prevent diseases caused by the measles, mumps, rubella, and chicken pox viruses are safe, or if they’re safe at all. Even after all the scientific studies have been done that show that vaccines don’t cause autism, many people still refuse to vaccinate their children. The CDC lists these studies that have been rejected as “inconclusive” and “unclear.
Some people are concerned that vaccines could cause autism. Those people may be missing out on a very important benefit of vaccines. The measles, mumps, rubella, and chicken pox viruses are highly contagious, and the antibodies they create to fight off the viruses are strong enough to kill a child who has been inoculated.
As I mentioned in a previous article, doctors believe that vaccines do cause autism, but at least some of these studies are suspect. There have even been cases of people with autism who were vaccinated and the vaccine was not causing the autism. This is why I have decided to create a vaccine-free page for my readers. I am also working on a website where if you’re interested in learning more, I can share my research and research protocols and give you a free vaccine.