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.
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!”
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
" 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...
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.
Thanks for the hospitality
"Thanks for the hospitality"
God bless you for your participation...
...where we howl 1, we howl all...
...hold the line Patriot...
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!”
Measles is highly contagious. We have known this for a very long time