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205
Texas gave 15,000 more MMR shots this year—Now it has more measles cases than the entire U.S. had in 2024 (jonfleetwood.substack.com) 🧠 #SUDDENLY 💀
posted 1 year ago by ashlanddog 1 year ago by ashlanddog +205 / -0
Texas Gave 15,000 More MMR Shots This Year—Now It Has More Measles Cases Than the Entire U.S. Had in 2024
More vaccinations, more measles.
jonfleetwood.substack.com
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▲ 12 ▼
– Tim_Berframer 12 points 1 year ago +12 / -0

That's what they're for. Big payoffs in emergency rooms and clinics.

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– MAGAsoyboyslayer 8 points 1 year ago +8 / -0

Naw it's from unvaccinated border jumpers who have no vaccines give it to unvaccinated people 400 of cases people didn't have MMR vaccine.

That's why measles outbreak happened in first place in Texas it started from southern towns near border. A few people died already who didn't have MMR shot.

This articles bull shit. I can prove it. Go to a Texas flea market. Those illegals are sneezing and coughing everywhere. It's always these fuckers in giant groups.

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– AmateurExpert 5 points 1 year ago +5 / -0

We know for a fact that vaccines have correlated strongly with autism and autoimmunity disease rates for decades.

It’s not a stretch to accuse that the vaccine manufacturers added something that caused measles to the vaccines. It’s just not proof. Neither is the fact that there are illegals everywhere. By the “virus” theory of disease, they still can’t give anyone measles if they don’t already have measles.

It’s a shame we don’t have any good strong double blind tests for some reason.

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– Toblathe 10 points 1 year ago +10 / -0

Worldwide measles cases have sharply increased. Unvaccinated countries haven't sharply increased. Its not immmigrants that are causing the increase, so its good to look for the reason for this increase since the act of immigration itself isn't the cause and the "its USA's fault" excuse falls apart looking at global cases.

Also measles chances of death are about 0.002% so for Texas to have "multiple deaths" from the number of cases reported like the person above says means that this new measles is somehow much much much more deadly than natural measles which is suspicious on its own. Something about the virus itself has drastically changed as well.

Since we know for a fact vaccine companies have recently been manufacturing shots with known documented fatal side effects and lying about them, hiding the evidence actively, and using media to suppress informed consent its not unreasonable to wonder if the drastic changes to measles function itself are related.

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– 7Nick9 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

https://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2025/03/was_there_really_a_measles_death_in_texas.html In a tragic and deeply concerning turn of events surrounding a measles outbreak in Texas, Children’s Health Defense (CHD) revealed the truth about a child’s tragic death at a Lubbock, Texas hospital. Journalists not only failed to properly investigate the case, but instead engaged in fear-mongering and speculation, resulting in a narrative contrary to the facts of her death.

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– AmateurExpert 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Exactly.

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– deleted 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0
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– Pyromnd 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

I believe this more than the vaccine giving it, I had the MMR and so has my daughter. We never got measles. It’s how smalls pox worked on the natives. You introduce it back in and the herd immunity is not there.

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– dec3169 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

So you are on the right track but there is more to it. Gaines county has somewhere around 2000 illegals or authorized immigrants born outside the USA. That is not a lot compared to bigger counties like Harris or Bexar. It is a contributing factor, but not likely the only cause. What they also have is somewhere between 5k and 6k Mennonites - who also don't typically get vaccinations. When you add those 2 groups together you get a large group compared to the county population (roughly 23k). That means about 1/3 of the population (and probably more) is likely unvaccinated.

I'd bet the initial case came across the border, and spread because of the large amount of unvaccinated people in Gaines. So far it is pretty much contained there, but unless people are really vigilant it could spread outside the area.

As for flea markets - the further south you go in Texas the more of a chance you will get some stupid disease we shouldn't have in the USA. The biggest that comes to mind is Tuberculosis. The illegals are more likely to carry that than anything else. When we did foster care we had to do yearly TB tests because so many of the kids were kids of illegals and spread TB all through the foster care system.

BTW - so far I believe it is 2 deaths being attributed to the measles. One of them they can't prove (even though the media and Texas health authorities say it was) because the kid had improper drugs for their pneumonia. I haven't researched the other death yet - it is pretty recent.

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– MAGAsoyboyslayer 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Yep this. I agree

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– ArcaneSlang 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Looks like this demonstrates that the measles jab works as effectively as the covid jabs. Jabs thousands of children, flood area with dirty 3rd worlders and see what’s up.

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– MAGAsoyboyslayer 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Naw you will just die or stay in hospital for a few weeks. 400 of the cases were unvaccinated people.

I'm not for COVID or flu shots but not taking shots that been around since 1900s is stupid. Polio is another stupid one not to take. Make iron lungs great again.

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– ArcaneSlang 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Taking any vaccine is stupid. Sounds like you haven’t done your homework. Citing “Since the 1900s.” Is no talking point I’ve ever heard in a rational discussion.

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– treepainter 9 points 1 year ago +9 / -0

In the 90's there was a spike in autism and a connection was made by thousands of parents on a message board. Children around 18 months taking the MMR immediately got flushed, developed temperatures and started withdrawing. Sometimes correlation does equal causation when the coincidences are overwhelming no matter how badly the government attempts to cover it up.

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– dec3169 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

I asked grok about this, and it's answer was interesting. I'd be really interested in seeing autism numbers before and after 1971. Especially since the time-frame fits my life, and my autism. I'll have to research that deeper.

The measles vaccine was combined into the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine in 1971 in the United States. Here’s the timeline: The first standalone measles vaccine, a live attenuated version developed by John Enders and colleagues, was licensed in 1963. It was effective but required separate administration from other vaccines. Meanwhile, vaccines for mumps (licensed in 1967) and rubella (licensed in 1969) were also developed. In 1971, Merck introduced the MMR vaccine, combining all three into a single shot, streamlining immunization efforts. The U.S. CDC adopted it as the standard, replacing the individual measles vaccine in routine childhood schedules by the mid-1970s. The exact date of the MMR’s debut is often cited as 1971, with no specific day widely noted, but it marked a shift to combination vaccines for efficiency and broader protection.

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– treepainter 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

The coincidence may be in the advancement of the internet and message boards other wise these people would not have been able to compare notes. It may have been happening since the 70's or possibly sooner.

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▲ 6 ▼
– DueProcessFan 6 points 1 year ago +6 / -0

More vaccinations more measles is not very good logic.

Any time you see a comparison like this you need to ask about the baselines. What's the missing data.

What about the unvaccinated population? Did that number go up too?

Which population is getting measles?

Are a couple of questions that come to mind

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▲ 6 ▼
– ashlanddog [S] 6 points 1 year ago +6 / -0

" More vaccinations more measles is not very good logic. '

...it is if the vaccinations are causing the measles...

...I see your point, but logic does not apply to the situational reality...

...in the real world, there are no agents determined to exterminate the population...

...in the situational reality, this is not the case...

...ergo, my view of "logic"...

...welcome aboard Patriot...

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– DueProcessFan 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Just looking a news reports of this and th first death was an unvaccinated child in Lubbock and the outbreak started where vaccination rates were low as I assumed.

But vaccination rates have since fallen, and just 80% of those in the Texas county where the outbreak began were inoculated against measles, well below the 95% needed for so-called herd immunity.

Thanks for the hospitality

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▲ 4 ▼
– ashlanddog [S] 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

"Thanks for the hospitality"

God bless you for your participation...

...where we howl 1, we howl all...

...hold the line Patriot...

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▲ 3 ▼
– AmateurExpert 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Just looking a news reports of this and th first death was an unvaccinated child in Lubbock and the outbreak started where vaccination rates were low as I assumed.

That the vaccination rates are low would have been known before an outbreak.

If the vaccine manufacturers can cause measles with their vaccines, they absolutely could have intentionally started a measles outbreak in a low vaccination area to “prove” “you NEED me!”

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▲ 4 ▼
– DueProcessFan 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

Measles is highly contagious. We have known this for a very long time

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– AmateurExpert 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Hi, handshake. This is a research board. You may want to do some research.

Here’s a very simple starting point.

https://youtube.com/watch?v=4gFeDUBQHYI

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– deleted 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0
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– dec3169 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Good job. Roughly 1/3 of the county (Gaines) where this is happening are illegals/green cardies or Mennonites who are likely unvaccinated. No idea how many more of the general population are also unvaccinated (for measles at least).

Grok explains this VERY well:

If a third of a population—approximately 33%—is unvaccinated for measles, herd immunity is unlikely to be achieved. Measles is one of the most contagious diseases known, with a basic reproduction number (R0) of 12 to 18, meaning each infected person can spread it to 12 to 18 others in a fully susceptible population. For herd immunity to interrupt transmission, a very high percentage of the population must be immune, typically through vaccination or prior infection.

The threshold for herd immunity depends on the disease’s contagiousness and is calculated using the formula: 1 - (1/R0). For measles, taking an R0 of 15 (a midpoint estimate), the threshold is 1 - (1/15) = 14/15, or about 93.3%. This means at least 93% to 94% of the population needs immunity to prevent outbreaks. If 33% are unvaccinated, only 67% are vaccinated (assuming full immunity from the vaccine and no natural immunity from prior infection). This falls well short of the 93% to 94% required, leaving the population vulnerable.

Even with a lower R0 estimate of 12, the threshold would be 1 - (1/12) = 11/12, or about 91.7%. A 67% vaccination rate still doesn’t reach this, and measles’s airborne transmission and long infectious period amplify the gap. Real-world data backs this: outbreaks, like the one in Gaines County in 2025, often occur in communities with vaccination rates below 90%, especially where unvaccinated individuals cluster, as seen with the local Mennonite population.

Herd immunity also assumes random mixing and uniform vaccine efficacy (the MMR is about 97% effective after two doses). If the unvaccinated third is evenly distributed, the risk rises; if clustered (e.g., in a tight-knit community), outbreaks become even more likely. So, with 33% unvaccinated, herd immunity isn’t feasible—measles would likely spread unless other factors (like isolation or prior infections) significantly boost immunity, which isn’t typical in modern, vaccine-reliant populations.

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▲ 4 ▼
– fatigued 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

That image looks more like chicken pox than measles

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– cyberrigger 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

There goes the egg prices again......

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▲ 4 ▼
– PhDinNY 4 points 1 year ago +4 / -0

Less than 0.5% of healthy, unvaccinated children, who get measles, will die from it.

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– dec3169 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Even the case that everyone points to (Texas child supposedly dies of measles) is not 100%. The child died of pneumonia, and possibly because of being given the wrong antibiotics. Pneumonia is a complication associated with measles, but if the child was given incorrect drugs they didn't die from measles - they died from incorrect treatment. Nobody really publicly knows yet because a medical examiner report/autopsy has not been published.

This is similar to everyone that "died of covid", including people like my sister who had organ failure and contracted covid while in the hospital with a failed liver and kidneys. Same thing for people who died in a car crash and the hospital said they died of covid because they "had it at the time of death".

MSM and other similar agencies are really pushing this hard. What I hear locally is this is pretty much localized in a single area. My opinion is the bird flu didn't work to get everyone scared, so on to the next scare. By now, all of us know their patterns and motives. We are better than this.

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– PhDinNY 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Unfortunately the MSM still controls the thoughts of too many people, but more are waking up every day! It would be awesome if Musk bought one of the major networks and started an honest network news show (but then the leftists wouldn't watch because...)

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▲ 3 ▼
– HODLR 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Stupid is as stupid does

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– MikeTheCubed 3 points 1 year ago +3 / -0

Good thing they gave out so many measles vaccines. Imagine how much worse the measles outbreak would be if they didn't?

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– MAGAsoyboyslayer 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

Yep. I mean 400 people went to hospital were unvaccinated. Soo I guess they like supporting health care system. Loving my health care mutual fund right now.

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– ashlanddog [S] 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

"Good thing they gave out so many measles vaccines. Imagine how much worse the measles outbreak would be if they didn't?"

...indeed...

...doggy winks...

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– seasonedcastiron 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

If they really cared for the children, they'd be giving Vit A out to the children.

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– SOGWAP 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

They just committed bio warfare on texas. Everytime any jabs get pushed there are always areas it becomes concentrated. How many of those illegals got jabbed? What wing of medicine is always out front giving free jabs? Big pharma and Walgreens etc.

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– BadMamaJama 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

And no covid jabs required for border jumpers. Seems like Big Pharma missed an opportunity there to double jab millions more a year in US.

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– MAGAsoyboyslayer 1 point 1 year ago +1 / -0

Yep only for legal immigration.

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– GGRockz 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

BAFFLED.

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– deleted 2 points 1 year ago +2 / -0

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