In 2002, Dr. Tom Mack of USC stated the following about the small pox epidemic --
“My credentials include probably spending more time working up [analyses of] population-based outbreaks of smallpox than virtually anybody ever has.”
Mack then stated --
“If people are worried about endemic smallpox [long lingering or permanent presence of the disease in the population], it disappeared from this country not because of our mass herd immunity [derived from a vaccine]. It disappeared because of our economic development. And that’s why it disappeared from Europe and many other countries… [its disappearance is] not from universal vaccination.”
“Most important determinant to the eventual number of [smallpox] cases is whether or not somebody gets put in the hospital. And everything should be done to prevent that.” “Unexposed [to the smallpox disease] community members have negligible risk. There is a substantial risk from a vaccine…It is the single most dangerous live vaccine.”
Until now.
Common diseases of the early part of the last Century were caused from the lack of sanitation and nutrition. It was a sanitation and hygiene issue. The prevalence of animal husbandry, the reliance of domesticated animals for travel, the lack of sanitation infrastructure, hygiene, and good nutrition contributed to widespread diseases.
While smallpox captured the imagination with its high death rate and gross manifestations on victims' bodies, less obvious infections claimed even more lives. For example, eighteenth-century Philadelphians drank water contaminated with fecal matter, which resulted in endemic typhoid, dysentery, and other intestinal diseases. Since polio was primarily transmitted in fecal matter, by simply improving sanitation infrastructure reduced the occurrence of polio cases. The increasing establishment of modern sanitation infrastructure, treated drinking water, and improved nutrition was the single most important reason why common diseases in America decreased dramatically beginning in the early part of the 20th century. By the 1950s and 1960s, the United States had the most modern and advanced sanitation infrastructure in the world. Disease precipitously dropped as a result. It was never the vaccines as the CDC and FDA claim that caused the drop in common diseases. It's all a damn lie. They are committing fraud. It can be easily shown, it was the improvement and expansion of sanitation infrastructure that best correlates with the decrease of common diseases. If anything, the vaccines extended the curve and decrease of common diseases when they were introduced after the decrease had already started.
Credit rightfully belongs to plumbers, electricians, sandhogs, engineers and city planners for eliminating disease.
In 2002, Dr. Tom Mack of USC stated the following about the small pox epidemic --
“My credentials include probably spending more time working up [analyses of] population-based outbreaks of smallpox than virtually anybody ever has.”
Mack then stated --
“If people are worried about endemic smallpox [long lingering or permanent presence of the disease in the population], it disappeared from this country not because of our mass herd immunity [derived from a vaccine]. It disappeared because of our economic development. And that’s why it disappeared from Europe and many other countries…[its disappearance is] not from universal vaccination.”
“Most important determinant to the eventual number of [smallpox] cases is whether or not somebody gets put in the hospital. And everything should be done to prevent that.” “Unexposed [to the smallpox disease] community members have negligible risk. There is a substantial risk from a vaccine…It is the single most dangerous live vaccine.”
Until now.
Common diseases of the early part of the last Century were caused from the lack of sanitation and nutrition. It was a sanitation and hygiene issue. The prevalence of animal husbandry, the reliance of domesticated animals for travel, the lack of sanitation infrastructure, hygiene, and good nutrition contributed to widespread diseases.
While smallpox captured the imagination with its high death rate and gross manifestations on victims' bodies, less obvious infections claimed even more lives. For example, eighteenth-century Philadelphians drank water contaminated with fecal matter, which resulted in endemic typhoid, dysentery, and other intestinal diseases. Since polio was primarily transmitted in fecal matter, by simply improving sanitation infrastructure reduced the occurrence of polio cases. The increasing establishment of modern sanitation infrastructure, treated drinking water, and improved nutrition was the single most important reason why common diseases in America decreased dramatically beginning in the early part of the 20th century. By the 1950s and 1960s, the United States had the most modern and advanced sanitation infrastructure in the world. Disease precipitously dropped as a result. It was never the vaccines as the CDC and FDA claim that caused the drop in common diseases. It's all a damn lie. They are committing fraud. It can be easily shown, it was the improvement and expansion of sanitation infrastructure that best correlates with the decrease of common diseases. If anything, the vaccines extended the curve and decrease of common diseases when they were introduced after the decrease had already started.
Credit rightfully belongs to plumbers, electricians, sandhogs, engineers and city planners for eliminating disease.