Vaccines and “herd immunity” nonsense

Jon Rappoport

Hail to the group! The group is all!

The concept of herd immunity (protection for the population) is often used by vaccine addicts as a way to push guilt at people who don’t line up, with their children, like robots for their shots.

From the point of view of protecting people who are already vaccinated, herd immunity is flat-out absurd.  

Little Jimmy, whose parents have decided not to vaccinate him, will pass diseases on to kids who are already vaccinated? Oh, you mean those immunized kids aren’t really safe? Then why did you vaccinate them in the first place?

From another point of view, herd immunity is the idea that people who “can’t be” vaccinated (for example, those who are obviously allergic to elements contained in vaccines) will gain a measure of protection, if larger and larger numbers of others are vaccinated.

The vaccinated protecting the unvaccinated.

This is foolish, because what actually protects people against disease is the strength of their immune systems, and that strength has nothing to do with vaccination.

If a person has a weak immune system, he will get dangerously sick, and it doesn’t matter how many people around him are vaccinated against how many diseases.

So even if one accepts the (false) premise that vaccines are effective and safe, the premise of herd immunity is ludicrous.

Vaccination is, in fact, a cover story used to conceal the fact that the health of populations has everything to do with good nutrition, adequate sanitation, and an absence of toxic elements in the environment.

There are many doctors who know this, but they refuse to speak out, because they know they’ll suffer consequences.

Vaccination, as a propaganda strategy, is used to medicalize the population—to assert that good health is fundamentally a medical matter.

It isn’t.

 

If tomorrow, two things happened, they would change the face of health in any industrialized country:

One, millions more people buying healthy food and/or growing their own food, in yards; and in inner cities, growing food in community gardens;

And two, the courts delivering justice in the form of billion-dollar fines and long, long prison sentences to corporate employees (including CEOs) for severe and real pollution.

Note: That justice would eliminate GMO crops which rely on toxic pesticide use.

I’m not spinning rainbows. I’m just pointing out that, with these two changes alone, hospitals and clinics and doctors’ offices would empty out, and the medical cartel would finally experience vast comeuppance.

Health and life are not medical functions.

Any science that claims they are is false science, and the people who make those claims are liars or morons or criminals, or some combination of all three.

Jon Rappoport

The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world. You can sign up for his free emails atwww.nomorefakenews.com

http://jonrappoport.wordpress.com/2014/11/13/vaccines-and-herd-immunity-nonsense/

6 thoughts on “Vaccines and “herd immunity” nonsense

  1. “Little Jimmy, whose parents have decided not to vaccinate him, will pass diseases on to kids who are already vaccinated? Oh, you mean those immunized kids aren’t really safe? Then why did you vaccinate them in the first place?”

    That HAS to be the burning question.

  2. Hey J.R. and #1, I don’t know what to think of this article on libertybalance2014.blogspot.com concerning this Quo Warranto filed against all federal judges and the nine Supreme Court Judges, I would most appreciate your take on the matter. I did send it to Henry but it wasn’t posted although the problem may be on my end because virus city has visited my computer again. I know this comment is “off topic” but my e-mail is not working right now and this was another avenue to communicate.

    1. You sure you posted this on the right article, Millard? JR isn’t here, and there’s no link to the article you’re talking about.

      Anyway, I just got rid of a nasty virus, and I’m not going to any new sites until I’m fully backed up (just got a $28 16 gig flash drive on sale for $8. Grabbed 2). I’m going to run 1 more full scan just before I do. That’ll take a while, but I’ll do it when I go for dinner, so I can download when I get back.

      1. No #1, I posted my question on this article because it was on your last post and I knew you would see it. If you get a chance, check this article out, It wasn’t the one that infected my computer, I was attacked 2 days ago and people have informed me that they aren’t receiving my e-mails. It’s like they let some get through but then most get tossed into cyberspace. I looking at a new computer at this point. I went back to Rense.com and they took the article down. You can still get there if you type in libertybalance2014.blogspot.com and look for the Quo Warranto article.

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