Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Vaccination PROVEN facts

Sent: Mon, September 13, 2010 11:46:38 PM
Vaccination PROVEN facts ... excellent resource..good
to keep on file



This is the full report on vaccine studies proving that they have never
worked...
Archive for use when people need more understandng! They're government charts...
INDISPUTABLE!
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Stunning Vaccination Graphs, The Awful Stats In Action

Raymond Obomsawin Ph.D
Figures I through I0 graphically illustrate that in North America, Europe and
the South Pacific, major declines in life-threatening infectious diseases
occurred historically either without, or far in advance of public immunization
efforts for specific diseases as listed. This provides irrefutable evidence that
vaccines are not necessary for the effective elimination of a wide range of
infectious diseases. Figures 11 through 19 graphically illustrate that
immunization is not by any means a proven and foolproof measure for protection
from various infectious disease conditions. It is often inconsequential
epidemiologically, and in some cases it is shown to actually worsen health-care
outcomes. Figures 20 through 29 graphically illustrate that increases in the
number of government mandated vaccines correlates with significant increases in
death rates for children under the age of 5 and that the practice is linked to
sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS); vario us degenerative diseases, including
diabetes and appears to cause general immune system impairment in infants and
children. Evidence also points to the practice of immunization as a principal
factor in the recent massive increases in neurodegenerative conditions such as
autism in children. One Click Note: The Immunization Graphsand the Synoptic
Overvieware a MUST READ. They vividly portray in pictures and words the
vaccination statistics that the pharmaceutical industry and governments
conjoined simply don't want you to see.
Information Release, Raymond Obomsawin Ph.D
Related Links:
* Immunization Graphs
Raymond Obomsawin Ph.D
* The Synoptic Overview: Issues In Immunization Theory And Practice
Raymond Obomsawin Ph.D

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