The Department of Justice has revealed that the flu shot is the most dangerous vaccine that exists in America today.
According to a report released by the DOJ, over half of all claims settled by the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program were for injuries caused by the influenza vaccination.
Naturalnews.com reports: During the period covering 16 August to 15 November 2013, 139 claims were settled by the Vaccine Court, 70 of which received compensation. Of these settled claims, 42 – or 60 percent – were for injuries caused by the flu vaccine. The remaining 40 percent were for injuries caused by 11 other vaccines.
The greatest number of injuries by far that were reported as a result of the flu vaccine were for Guillain-Barré Syndrome, or GBS, a condition which the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke describes as follows:
Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) is a disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks part of the peripheral nervous system. The first symptoms of this disorder include varying degrees of weakness or tingling sensations in the legs. In many instances the symmetrical weakness and abnormal sensations spread to the arms and upper body. These symptoms can increase in intensity until certain muscles cannot be used at all and, when severe, the person is almost totally paralyzed. In these cases the disorder is life threatening – potentially interfering with breathing and, at times, with blood pressure or heart rate – and is considered a medical emergency. Such an individual is often put on a ventilator to assist with breathing and is watched closely for problems such as an abnormal heart beat, infections, blood clots, and high or low blood pressure. Most individuals, however, have good recovery from even the most severe cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome, although some continue to have a certain degree of weakness.
The flu vaccine: a toxic recipe for disaster
The injuries caused by the flu vaccine, as listed in the Department of Justice report, are not limited to Guillain-Barré Syndrome, however. They also include: neurological injury, peripheral neuropathy, painful myalgias, psychological sequella, opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome, cerebellar ataxia, corneal transplant failure, transverse myelitis, encephalitis, shoulder injury, bilateral optic neuritis resulting in permanent legal blindness, leukoencephalopathy, chemically-induced multiple sclerosis, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, fibromyalgia, and death, among others.
To the uninformed it might seem shocking that a medical procedure considered safe by the mainstream medical community could cause such serious health problems. When one considers the flu vaccine’s ingredients and adjuvants, however, it becomes totally understandable.
For one thing, the flu vaccine contains 25,000 times more mercury than is legally allowed in water. For another, statistics confirm that vaccinated people are actually more susceptible to the flu and often get more ill than those who focus on building up their own body’s immune system.
Reports like these raise many issues. For example, considering the severity of the reactions and conditions linked to the flu vaccine in just a three-month period, and remembering that very few adverse vaccine reactions are ever reported, why is the mainstream media not shouting this information from the rooftops? Why is there virtually total media silence when it comes to the dangers of vaccines in general? Why are we not given this information when we choose to vaccinate ourselves and our children with these potentially deadly vaccines?
Reblogged this on Rangitikei Enviromental Health Watch.
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Wow a Recent Report from 2013 ??? that is 5 years Old. so it is Not the Latest Report it is a very Late report. .Many Obese unhealthy Americans Would Die With or Without the Vaccine . Heart Attacks Blood Clots Do Happen in Obese people with Veins Arteries Clogged with Animal Fats. my Dad had a Massive Heart attack Due to his use of Saturated animal Fat to Cook with. So Most of Them would Die from UnNatural Obesity anyway.
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Health·MarketplaceHidden cameras capture misinformation, fundraising tactics used by anti-vaxx movement’Their goal is to create noise, to create uncertainty,’ says one public health expert
Eric Szeto, Katie Pedersen, Asha Tomlinson · CBC News · Posted: Jan 17, 2020 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: January 18
Del Bigtree, an anti-vaccination activist, speaks before a crowd of anti-vaxxers at a VIP event in Washington, D.C. Bigtree is a controversial documentarian and one of the movement’s biggest figures. (CBC)
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They came from across North America, paying $200 each to attend the ritzy event in Washington, D.C., hoping to snag selfies with some of the biggest names in the anti-vaccination movement.
For the anti-vaccination activists gathered in the U.S. capital last November, it was also a chance to strategize on ways to further their cause.
And they were more than willing to share those strategies with the undercover Marketplace journalists who attended the event, posing as activists trying to grow the movement in Canada.
The Marketplace investigation provided a rare glimpse into the inner workings of the anti-vaxx movement, which experts say is largely to blame for a shift in mindset about vaccination. Nearly half of Canadians today have some concern about vaccine safety.
“Take vaccines out of the name — that way you won’t get flagged,” said one Virginian woman attending the event.
She was speaking about how to get around social media filters geared at weeding out anti-vaccination content.
WATCH | A glimpse inside the anti-vaccination movement:
Watch
Undercover in Washington at a VIP anti-vaccination event4 days ago 0:38
Hidden cameras rolling, Marketplace producers went undercover to find out how anti-vaxxers spread their message online and the business behind the movement.0:38
The woman also pointed to another popular tactic: Challenging vaccination policies under the seemingly libertarian banner of “health freedom,” “medical freedom,” or “informed consent.”
Her own group is named Virginians for Informed Consent and has about 1,200 members.
Watch Marketplace’s full investigation, Anti-Vaccination Movement, on CBC’s Gemand YouTube.
She’s also gone a step further, making the group almost impossible for the public to find.
“We’re secret,” she said. “You can’t search our name [on Facebook].”
‘Spreading misinformation will create chaos’
The VIP event attended by Marketplacefollowed a public rally on Washington’s National Mall, where a number of anti-vaccination celebrities — Andrew Wakefield, Del Bigtree and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — galvanized loyal activists, eager to speak out against what they claim is a coverup of a massive vaccine injury epidemic.
A crowd gathers in front of the stage at a public rally for anti-vaxxers on Washington’s National Mall. (Eric Szeto/CBC)
The movement persists despite a scientific consensus among medical professionals, vaccininologists and toxicologists that vaccines are safe and effective.
“Their goal is to create noise, to create uncertainty,” said Timothy Caulfield, a health law and policy expert and author of The Vaccination Picture, a book debunking anti-vaccination myths.
“Spreading misinformation will create chaos — and that’s exactly what they’ve done.”
Non-medical exemptions from vaccines have spiked in recent years, as have outbreaks from vaccine-preventable diseases, such as measles.
MORE FROM MARKETPLACE |Debunking some of the main anti-vaccination myths
In California, where exemption rates reportedly reached 10 per cent or more in some schools, lawmakers passed new laws limiting such exemptions.
Last year, Toronto Public Health passed a motion asking the province to consider removing non-medical exemptions in Ontario. Health officials said exemption rates had more than doubled, to around two per cent, over the past 12 years.
But it didn’t come without protest: dozens of anti-vaccination activists showed up at city hall to fight that motion.
Supporters of Vaccine Choice Canada, a group launching a legal challenge to Ontario’s child-vaccination system, hold a rally at Queen’s Park in Toronto last October.(Evan Mitsui/CBC)
“People around the world have stopped vaccinating because of the rhetoric that they’ve read online, that they’ve had in discussion groups, about how vaccines may be harmful,” said Dr. Vinita Dubey, of Toronto Public Health.
“At what point are we going to say: the exemption rates are too high, and we’re putting the population at risk?”
Vaccination being challenged in court
In October, Vaccine Choice Canada, an anti-vaccination non-profit group, along with five Ontario mothers, launched a constitutional challengearguing the province’s current vaccination policies — which force parents to go through a course before getting a non-medical exemption or else risk school suspension for their kids — were too onerous and infringed on their rights.
The province previously told CBC it would not be considering an end to non-medical exemptions.
Dr. Vinita Dubey, of Toronto Public Health, says anti-vaccination rhetoric is dangerous and can have deadly consequences. (Bill Arnold/CBC)
A few months prior to the constitutional challenge in Ontario, when the government of New Brunswick introduced a bill that would have removed non-medical exemptions, anti-vaxxers gathered in Fredericton to push back against it.
At the time, the bill was delayed, though a new bill has since been reintroduced and is currently at second reading.
Similar challenges have been launched at statehouses across the United States — most recently in New Jersey, where lawmakers voted down a bill to remove non-medical exemptions.
“They would love to be able to predict what we have going on. They can’t predict [it],” James Lyons-Weiler, a well-known activist who runs a U.S. non-profit anti-vaxx group, said at the Washington event. “Keep their heads spinning.”
Such tactics are “incredibly craven,” said Seth Mnookin, author of The Panic Virus: The True Story Behind the Vaccine-Autism Controversy.
“It’s a dishonest way to go about things,” he said. “I think it shows there’s an awareness if they try to have this debate in a real way, and try to present the facts and have honest discussions with parents and with legislators, that their side would lose.
“They don’t have facts on their side, and they don’t have science.”
Wakefield behind debunked autism study
Marketplace set out to find out just how anti-vaxx groups rally people — and money — for the cause.
Using hidden cameras, social media, court documents and tax returns, Marketplace pieced together a portrait of the movement’s misinformation and fundraising tactics.
One man who knows a lot about those tactics is Andrew Wakefield, one of the world’s most notorious anti-vaxxers, who attended the Washington event.
The disgraced British ex-doctor famously helped spawn a generation of vaccine fear after co-authoring a 1998 study linking the MMR vaccine to autism. The study was eventually retracted after it was revealed much of the research was fraudulent and that Wakefield had financial conflicts of interest while doing the work.
Wakefield also lost his medical licence, though he now has a career in the anti-vaccination movement.
Undercover Marketplace producers spoke to Andrew Wakefield on hidden camera. The former doctor lost his medical licence in 2010. He was one of several speakers at the Washington event. (CBC)
“I love Canadians,” said Wakefield when the undercover Marketplaceteam introduced themselves.
Saying they were hoping to have him speak at a future event in Vancouver, the team asked about Wakefield’s speaking fee. Marketplace later learned via email he would charge $3,000 for the engagement.
“I don’t begrudge people to earn money to write and give speeches,” said Mnookin. “The part I find offensive is that it’s money that’s made off stoking people’s fears and anxieties. I wish he wasn’t making money off of falsehoods … he’s apparently made a career out of this.”
Millions raised to advance anti-vaxx advocacy
According to tax filings, Wakefield brought in more than $3 million US to advance his debunked cause through non-profits and research over the past decade. A number of those non-profits have since been dissolved.
Wakefield’s lawyer, Jim Moody, confirmed his client has raised “a few million” dollars for the cause but said he is not a “profiteer on this issue.”
Doctors worry as anti-vaccination messages escalate from social media misinformation to personal threats
Moody said the money was originally put toward research projects, but Wakefield has since pivoted, and “most of his output now is in advocacy, film, written work and speeches, and not in published research papers.”
“If he does know that it is a lie, this is a pretty evil pursuit,” said Caulfield of Wakefield’s ongoing anti-vaxx advocacy.
“If he doesn’t know it’s a lie, that he’s somehow tricked himself into believing his nonsense, it shows an incredible ability to ignore the truth … it shows an incredible ability to allow harm to continue despite what the science says.”
Marketplace co-host Asha Tomlinson confronts Bigtree outside the Washington event, which took place in November 2019.(Bill Arnold/CBC)
Another leader of the movement is Del Bigtree, a former TV producer and controversial filmmaker who travels the world to host various speaking engagements and founded a non-profit called the Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN).
He’s also one of Wakefield’s biggest defenders, working on a controversial documentary with him in 2016, and is often at the forefront of rallies protesting legislation that would limit vaccine exemptions.
Bigtree grabbed headlines last year when The Washington Post and othersreported that the Selz Foundation — run by a wealthy New York hedge fund founder and his wife — gave ICAN more than $1 million US to further the anti-vaxx cause. According to 2017 tax filings for the non-profit, that accounted for a majority of the $1.4 million the group raised that year.
Watch as Marketplace host Asha Tomlinson questions Del Bigtree about vaccine research:
Watch
Marketplace confronts anti-vaxx leader Del Bigtree at Washington event2 days ago 0:35
The anti-vaccination movement persists despite a scientific consensus among medical professionals that vaccines are safe and effective. 0:35
When asked about Bigtree’s speaking fees, his manager, James Sherrer, told an undercover Marketplace journalisthe, too, charged $3,000, not including airfare and hotel.
“It’s worth it these days,” he said. “He’s pretty in demand.”
Bigtree later told Marketplace that speaking fees “help to fund the greater part of my work, which involves travelling state to state to speak and educate for free.”
‘It’s a war around the truth’: Health experts, Facebook and YouTube play catch-up with anti-vaxxers
Finding workarounds
Other anti-vaxx figures, such as James Lyons-Weiler, find workarounds.
Since 2015, Lyons-Weiler, has run a self-described “progressive science” group. He told Marketplace’s undercover journalists that he’s “not for or against” vaccines.
“I’m a not-for-profit — I’m just educating,” he said at the VIP event.
Yet in speeches, he touts the false claim that “vaccines can and do cause autism” and holds events at which he vows to “bring the science.”
Earlier this month, he held an event in Los Angeles with another high-profile activist, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., where they charged $40 to $55 US per ticket.
Why some experts say it’s time for Twitter and Facebook to ban anti-vaccination postsStronger action urged against homeopathic products touted as alternatives to vaccines
When asked how much it would cost to bring him to Canada to speak, Lyons-Weiler told the undercover Marketplace team that he didn’t charge, because it would make him “an international lobbyist.”
“So, what I would rather do is, I do a science day the day before,” he said. “I’d run an event where you … charge admission as per my website.”
“Sounds like a promo thing for you, a marketing thing for you,” said our journalist. “Now we’ve gotta quid pro quo.”
“That’s right,” he said, later detailing through an assistant that for a group of 400 people, he would want about $20 US per person, netting around $10,000 Cdn.
“I think that there is a large majority of them … [that] must be aware of the science. And this is a way of creating celebrity, this is a way of creating demand, this is a way of making a living,” said Caulfield.
Lyons-Weiler later told Marketplace in an email that there is nothing wrong with getting paid for his services and that there are costs associated with holding events.
Growth persists online
One activist at the Washington event recommended that Marketplace’s undercover team use AmazonSmile to fundraise, the charity arm through which the online retailer donates 0.5 per cent of eligible Amazon purchases to whichever registered charity a customer selects.
“It’s almost kind of like, ‘Ha ha, Amazon,'” said the participant, referring to Amazon’s attempts to remove anti-vaccination books and videos from its site.
“They’re trying to restrict … free speech, but you’re still donating to my vaccine charity.”
A screenshot from Facebook shows an anti-vaccination group urging others to use AmazonSmile to support the cause. (Facebook)
As part of its investigation, Marketplace found a number of anti-vaxx non-profits on AmazonSmile to which customers could donate.
When asked about them, Amazon said organizations that support “intolerance, hate, terrorism, violence, money laundering, or other illegal activities are not eligible.”
It said that if there are violations of this agreement, an organization’s “eligibility will be revoked.”
Anti-vaxx movement still active on Facebook
While online platforms, and social media, in particular, have become a primary tool in the anti-vaccination fight, companies — such as Facebook — have begun hiding (but not removing) such content from search results, in part because of pressure from lawmakers.
Still, Marketplace found dozens of groups in Canada and the U.S. that purport to advocate for “health freedom” and “informed consent” but regularly promoted content questioning vaccine safety.
If the U.S. loses its measles elimination status, could Canada be next?
Most of the groups, such as the “Oklahomans for Health and Parental Rights” or “Informed Choice Washington,” were at the top of Facebook’s search feeds. Those two groups combined had more than 25,000 followers.
Groups such as Vaccine Choice Canada — a major Canadian anti-vaccination group — were also in the feed. And anti-vaccination leaders, such as Wakefield, Kennedy Jr. and Bigtree, were also searchable.
Facebook has begun cracking down on misinformation spread by anti-vaccination groups, but many in the movement say they’ve found ways to get around this by using terms like ‘medical freedom’ and ‘informed consent.’ (Facebook)
Facebook has also been home to paid anti-vaccination advertising. Several media outlets have reported most of the ads had been purchased by two organizations, including Kennedy Jr.’s non-profit, World Mercury Project, which later became the Children’s Health Defense.
Though those ads have since been banned, the reach of that misinformation was widespread. Based on Marketplace’s analysis, dozens of vaccine-related ads from Kennedy Jr.’s group had one to three million impressions on Facebook over a two-year period.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., speaks against legislation to narrow exemptions to state-mandated vaccines during a rally in Albany, N.Y. (Hans Pennink/The Associated Press)
Kennedy Jr. did not respond to Marketplace’s request for comment.
Marketplace shared the findings of the investigation with Facebook, including a number of pages that spread misinformation.
In response, Facebook told Marketplace it had flagged and reduced distribution for three of the pages for “spreading vaccine misinformation.” The company also said it disabled a number of other accounts, because they violate Facebook’s policies on misrepresentation.
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