"If you look at under the reign of Fauci for 40 plus years, where childhood chronic diseases and illnesses have gone from 6% to about 54% as we've added more and more layers of shots onto those schedules. And again, they'll say 'Correlation isn't causation.' Well, not a single childhood vaccine was ever tried in their clinical trials against placebo."
https://twitter.com/VigilantFox/status/1629888923282427912?s=20
To be honest tweety, my questions were intentionally a bit leading in my original comment. You're intelligently expanding in a way that I hoped someone would.
Bottom line, I think it's going to be really important in the long run for us to get that noise to signal ratio down a LOT so in the future, we can make good decisions on vaccination for our kids.
If we strip away all the poisons and toxins being put into these vaccinations, are they a good thing? I suspect they are as well (when used in a measured manner) but I also want to be very careful of avoiding my own preconceived notions here.
We have so little data on vaccines now that aren't tainted by the poisons put into them, it's difficult to know for certain.
I was not aware of homeopathic vax options. Thank you for sharing .
Side note, while I am completely against CV-19 jabs and I do think a number of the jabs currently on the schedule need to be eliminated , I do think some need to be considered carefully, only because I don't think we realize what it is to live in a world with polio or smallpox. The baby/bathwater argument. It very well may be the issues have more to do with the makeup of ingredients and if that is the case, then it appears we have homeopathic options. But it also may be the vaccinations themselves and if that is the case, we need to weigh the options carefully. I know there are arguments against the smallpox vaccine and they have validity, but it is also a disease with a 30% chance of dying. Are we ready to commit to that?
I realize this may not be a popular stance, but I think the discussion needs to be had without the manipulation of bad actors.
Thank you for sharing. This is exactly the kind of conversation I would like to see. Bless you as well fren...
We had a couple of bouts of impetigo. The first time was from little kids in the neighborhood helping themselves to a play on the wee bikes and trikes that were parked on our front lawn. No problems with them doing that, but we all got infected, and dealt with the sores as you said. The second time, was from a home-school meeting with other families in the district: my partner developed them ALL over the lower legs, pus everywhere, and fever. I got a very painful sore, about the size of a one-ounce silver coin, on my ankle that started eating into my bone. I tried everything. In the end, we both had to take antibiotics, and I hate those things. the kids were fine with a couple of little sores.
I took me six months to get over the whole episode, and still sometimes ache in my ankle. So moral of the story is: Don't take impetigo lightly, if the rash spreads, a fever develops, or it gets really painful, growing larger and deeper. Most sores are easy to deal with, I'll readily admit.