Page 85 - Summer 2019 Journal
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cut sugar consumption by 90 percent, reported polio cases dropped by a comparable percent- age, falling to two hundred and twenty-nine cases in 1949 as compared to almost twenty-five hundred the previous year.1 Another doctor prac- ticing in the 1940s and 1950s, Dr. Fred Klenner, “cured every one of the sixty polio patients he treated, some of them paralyzed, using massive injections of vitamin C.”39
In March 2014, the WHO declared India to be polio-free due to vaccination. Once again, however, the global health agency failed to tell the public the whole truth, omitting the fact that they established the same diagnostic criteria in India and other “polio-free” nations as the U.S. used starting in 1955 to create the impression of vaccine success. As Dr. Humphries has famous- ly said, “It is a game of smoke and mirrors.”
NEW (OR OLD) FORMS OF PARALYSIS The WHO has also made little mention of the skyrocketing incidence in countries like India of a condition called acute flaccid paraly- sis (AFP). In India, the timing and incidence of “non-polio” AFP have corresponded very closely to the country’s largely experimental policy of administering “pulse” doses of OPV
to children ages zero to five.
Indian researchers described this strong
correlation in a 2018 publication in the Inter- national Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health and calculated that, country- wide from 2000-2017, there were “an additional 491,000 paralyzed children” in excess of “the expected numbers.”40 Dr. Humphries suggests that—far from being able to credit vaccination campaigns with eliminating childhood paraly- sis—“there is strong evidence pointing to the likelihood that experimental polio vaccination is related to the sharp rise in AFP.”7
The problem of sudden inexplicable pa- ralysis also remains salient in the U.S., where a condition called acute flaccid myelitis (AFM) caused nearly two hundred cases of paralysis in 2018.41 This “polio-like” illness, a serious condition of the spinal cord, includes symptoms such as dizziness, an inability to walk properly, difficulty swallowing and arm mobility issues.42 Other symptoms include fever, respiratory is- sues such as coughing, runny nose, congestion
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and gastrointestinal problems, including vomit- ing and diarrhea.43
Although the CDC began recording cases of AFM in 2014, the cause of the polio-like disor- der is still unknown. The various explanations that have been put forth include environmental toxins or infection with non-polio enterovi- ruses.44 And, while no one knows for sure, some speculate that polio vaccines or other vaccines are causing AFM as well as non-polio AFP,45 with the injected aluminum adjuvants in vac- cines possibly playing a role as well.44
Nancy Messonnier, MD, director of the CDC’s National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, has stated that AFM “seems to be more of an autoimmune syndrome, as opposed to a direct result of a virus.”46 Autoimmune diseases such as Guillain-Barré syndrome are known adverse reactions to vaccines, as evidenced by contraindication warnings on many vaccine package inserts, in- cluding polio vaccines. As the National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC) concludes:
Based on Messonnier’s view that AFM might be an autoimmune disorder similar to Guillain-Barré Syndrome, and based on the fact that Guillain-Barré Syndrome can reportedly be triggered by a number of vaccines, it would be reasonable to at least consider the possibility of an association between AFM and vaccination. This is particularly relevant given that 99 percent of confirmed AFM cases were diagnosed in individuals who had shown clinical symptoms that could have been caused by vaccination.43
Miller points to another relatively recent concern having to do with the new and more deadly strains of poliovirus that have emerged as a result of overvaccination.1 Researchers first documented that a “vaccine-derived” poliovi- rus had caused outbreaks of polio in Egypt in the early 1980s.47 In 2000, the CDC identified vaccine-derived polio strains in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.47 Also in 2000, research- ers found a new infectious and virulent polio- virus in Japan’s rivers and sewage; as described by Miller, genetic sequencing confirmed that
Wise Traditions
What prevents disease most efficiently
is proper sanitation and nutrient- dense traditional diets—not mass vaccination campaigns.
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