The vaccine programme
In the 1950s it was recommended that children should be vaccinated for whooping cough, diphtheria and polio by the time they reached three years old. They were then expected to have boosters at the ages of five and seven. The BCGwas recommended at twelve or thirteen years old. Nowadays this policy has changed so that children are routinely immunised with DPT, polio and HiB (the haemophilus influenza bacteria that is present in meningitis) at two, three and four months old, and with MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) at twelve months old. Both these vaccines are then given again at pre-school age though the pertussis (medical term for whooping cough) is usually left out. At the end of secondary education adults are recommended to have a further booster of the diphtheria and tetanus vaccine. The meningitis C vaccine is also recommended as it is the seventeen to twenty age group that most readily contracts this variety of the disease. There are variations to this schedule across the country.
What is in the syringe?
In the hypodermic syringe is a cocktail; not only of live, attenuated or detoxified extracts of the viruses and bacteria, but also of preservatives such as formaldehyde, antibiotics (such as streptomycin), mercury, aluminium and a range of far from innocuous chemicals such as hydrochloric acid. Any reports of side effects are seen to be caused by the bacteria or viruses used. This may be an inaccurate premise as any chemical or metal foreign to the body is capable of causing biochemical reactions within the organism. Formaldehyde can cause tissue damage; antibiotics can cause disturbance to the digestion and to the hormone cycle; mercury causes toxic reactions such as have already been discussed; aluminium can cause paralysis.
Furthermore, in an effort to encourage a broad-spectrum immunity to several diseases early on in life, the syringe contains the material of several diseases at once. The two-month-old body is asked to cope with the introduction directly into the bloodstream of five differing diseases: whooping cough, that affects the respiratory system; diphtheria, which attacks the lymphatic tissue of the throat; tetanus, which affects the entire central nervous system; haemophilus, which is an influenza virus that can cause meningitis; and polio, which affects the gut, the musculature and central nervous system, and which is introduced orally. Amongst these five, only whooping cough is actually a recognised childhood disease. Meningitis C is given separately but is nevertheless expected to be taken on by the infant body at the same time as the others.
The measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is a shot that is intended to protect against three childhood diseases that are usually of short duration and without any lasting side effects. The MMR and, most recently, meningitis C and the pre-school boosters are all given before puberty sets in. This means that children are immunised against nine different diseases before their own natural immune system’s defence mechanism has matured. In addition, this toxic brew is introduced directly into the bloodstream, a situation that does not happen in nature at all. (Though tetanus is the result of a wound, it is the nervous system that is affected and not the circulatory system or the lymphatics.)
In the 1950s it was recommended that children should be vaccinated for whooping cough, diphtheria and polio by the time they reached three years old. They were then expected to have boosters at the ages of five and seven. The BCGwas recommended at twelve or thirteen years old. Nowadays this policy has changed so that children are routinely immunised with DPT, polio and HiB (the haemophilus influenza bacteria that is present in meningitis) at two, three and four months old, and with MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) at twelve months old. Both these vaccines are then given again at pre-school age though the pertussis (medical term for whooping cough) is usually left out. At the end of secondary education adults are recommended to have a further booster of the diphtheria and tetanus vaccine. The meningitis C vaccine is also recommended as it is the seventeen to twenty age group that most readily contracts this variety of the disease. There are variations to this schedule across the country.
What is in the syringe?
In the hypodermic syringe is a cocktail; not only of live, attenuated or detoxified extracts of the viruses and bacteria, but also of preservatives such as formaldehyde, antibiotics (such as streptomycin), mercury, aluminium and a range of far from innocuous chemicals such as hydrochloric acid. Any reports of side effects are seen to be caused by the bacteria or viruses used. This may be an inaccurate premise as any chemical or metal foreign to the body is capable of causing biochemical reactions within the organism. Formaldehyde can cause tissue damage; antibiotics can cause disturbance to the digestion and to the hormone cycle; mercury causes toxic reactions such as have already been discussed; aluminium can cause paralysis.
Furthermore, in an effort to encourage a broad-spectrum immunity to several diseases early on in life, the syringe contains the material of several diseases at once. The two-month-old body is asked to cope with the introduction directly into the bloodstream of five differing diseases: whooping cough, that affects the respiratory system; diphtheria, which attacks the lymphatic tissue of the throat; tetanus, which affects the entire central nervous system; haemophilus, which is an influenza virus that can cause meningitis; and polio, which affects the gut, the musculature and central nervous system, and which is introduced orally. Amongst these five, only whooping cough is actually a recognised childhood disease. Meningitis C is given separately but is nevertheless expected to be taken on by the infant body at the same time as the others.
The measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is a shot that is intended to protect against three childhood diseases that are usually of short duration and without any lasting side effects. The MMR and, most recently, meningitis C and the pre-school boosters are all given before puberty sets in. This means that children are immunised against nine different diseases before their own natural immune system’s defence mechanism has matured. In addition, this toxic brew is introduced directly into the bloodstream, a situation that does not happen in nature at all. (Though tetanus is the result of a wound, it is the nervous system that is affected and not the circulatory system or the lymphatics.)
The vaccine programme
In the 1950s it was recommended that children should be vaccinated for whooping cough, diphtheria and polio by the time they reached three years old. They were then expected to have boosters at the ages of five and seven. The BCGwas recommended at twelve or thirteen years old. Nowadays this policy has changed so that children are routinely immunised with DPT, polio and HiB (the haemophilus influenza bacteria that is present in meningitis) at two, three and four months old, and with MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) at twelve months old. Both these vaccines are then given again at pre-school age though the pertussis (medical term for whooping cough) is usually left out. At the end of secondary education adults are recommended to have a further booster of the diphtheria and tetanus vaccine. The meningitis C vaccine is also recommended as it is the seventeen to twenty age group that most readily contracts this variety of the disease. There are variations to this schedule across the country.
What is in the syringe?
In the hypodermic syringe is a cocktail; not only of live, attenuated or detoxified extracts of the viruses and bacteria, but also of preservatives such as formaldehyde, antibiotics (such as streptomycin), mercury, aluminium and a range of far from innocuous chemicals such as hydrochloric acid. Any reports of side effects are seen to be caused by the bacteria or viruses used. This may be an inaccurate premise as any chemical or metal foreign to the body is capable of causing biochemical reactions within the organism. Formaldehyde can cause tissue damage; antibiotics can cause disturbance to the digestion and to the hormone cycle; mercury causes toxic reactions such as have already been discussed; aluminium can cause paralysis.
Furthermore, in an effort to encourage a broad-spectrum immunity to several diseases early on in life, the syringe contains the material of several diseases at once. The two-month-old body is asked to cope with the introduction directly into the bloodstream of five differing diseases: whooping cough, that affects the respiratory system; diphtheria, which attacks the lymphatic tissue of the throat; tetanus, which affects the entire central nervous system; haemophilus, which is an influenza virus that can cause meningitis; and polio, which affects the gut, the musculature and central nervous system, and which is introduced orally. Amongst these five, only whooping cough is actually a recognised childhood disease. Meningitis C is given separately but is nevertheless expected to be taken on by the infant body at the same time as the others.
The measles, mumps and rubella vaccine is a shot that is intended to protect against three childhood diseases that are usually of short duration and without any lasting side effects. The MMR and, most recently, meningitis C and the pre-school boosters are all given before puberty sets in. This means that children are immunised against nine different diseases before their own natural immune system’s defence mechanism has matured. In addition, this toxic brew is introduced directly into the bloodstream, a situation that does not happen in nature at all. (Though tetanus is the result of a wound, it is the nervous system that is affected and not the circulatory system or the lymphatics.)