If we go with the official narrative and also assume that the tetanus vaccine is safe and effective, there still is the strong point of modern wound care. Tetanus is an anaerobic (growing in oxygen-deprived environments) bacterium. This implies that for a wound to get infected it needs to be deep and non-bleeding, because blood brings oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide also brings oxygen.
If you have a deep cut and a doctor/professional takes care of it or you simply clean and treat it properly with hydrogen peroxide, I see zero chance that tetanus could be any problem for you and zero need for a 'vaccine'.
Among all the vaccinations in Germany (which is where I live), I find the tetanus vaccine to be the easiest to debunk for said reason. Thus I'm always a bit surprised, as the anti-vaccine-people here, including medical professionals, usually tend to be pretty open towards it.
tl;dr: Proper wound care alone makes the tetanus vaccine superfluous.
Hydrogen peroxide is good. Whenever one of our horses had a cut (e.g., hoof caught in fencewire), we would wash the wound with a liberal application of hydrogen peroxide. Lots of foaming (oxygen release). The horse's constitution would take care of the rest. (And, yes, "healthy as a horse" has real meaning.)
Good point! Horses love apples even more than they like carrots, and they like carrots a lot. I used to break a carrot into 1 1/2 -inch lengths and then hold the piece in my lips to offer it to them. They would reach up and gently take it with their own lips. People would be amazed to see it. I don't know why. It was about as complicated as giving a piece of steak to a dog. But it is fun to hold an apple and let a horse eat it (in about 3 or 4 bites, gets a bit messy).
If we go with the official narrative and also assume that the tetanus vaccine is safe and effective, there still is the strong point of modern wound care. Tetanus is an anaerobic (growing in oxygen-deprived environments) bacterium. This implies that for a wound to get infected it needs to be deep and non-bleeding, because blood brings oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide also brings oxygen.
If you have a deep cut and a doctor/professional takes care of it or you simply clean and treat it properly with hydrogen peroxide, I see zero chance that tetanus could be any problem for you and zero need for a 'vaccine'.
Among all the vaccinations in Germany (which is where I live), I find the tetanus vaccine to be the easiest to debunk for said reason. Thus I'm always a bit surprised, as the anti-vaccine-people here, including medical professionals, usually tend to be pretty open towards it.
tl;dr: Proper wound care alone makes the tetanus vaccine superfluous.
Hydrogen peroxide is good. Whenever one of our horses had a cut (e.g., hoof caught in fencewire), we would wash the wound with a liberal application of hydrogen peroxide. Lots of foaming (oxygen release). The horse's constitution would take care of the rest. (And, yes, "healthy as a horse" has real meaning.)
Well they got the "apple a day" thing working for them....so there's that.
Good point! Horses love apples even more than they like carrots, and they like carrots a lot. I used to break a carrot into 1 1/2 -inch lengths and then hold the piece in my lips to offer it to them. They would reach up and gently take it with their own lips. People would be amazed to see it. I don't know why. It was about as complicated as giving a piece of steak to a dog. But it is fun to hold an apple and let a horse eat it (in about 3 or 4 bites, gets a bit messy).