outbreak noun
out·break | \ˈau̇t-ˌbrāk \
Definition of outbreak
1a : a sudden or violent increase in activity or currency
the outbreak of war
b : a sudden rise in the incidence of a disease
an outbreak of measles
c : a sudden increase in numbers of a harmful organism and especially an insect within a particular area
an outbreak of locusts
There are some decent references in here, pertaining to the particular uptick in vaccine derived illnesses in the 50s. There are a bunch of articles (some from CDC, even) that discusses oral vaccine derived polio in African countries in more recent times.
In these cases, the specifics relate to a flawed method (I'm not against the principles of vaccination), but that is often the point. Especially when weird stuff happens like elites being given access to special, safer vaccines.
Vaccination itself could stand a chance of being accepted, if it were allowed to be properly and openly debated and discussed, IMO.
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kalgon ago
So, which shot is the cancer shot? Vaccine against what, name of the brand, any specific for people to avoid those for them and their families?
MrDarkWater ago
Avoid them all. Absolutely. Bring back polio until we get pharmaceutical companies we can trust.
goatsandbros ago
Note: the real polio outbreaks didn't happen until after vaccination became widespread. Really makes you think.
mirimar ago
Gee, how did FDR get it then? He was infected before the vaccine was invented.
Apparently, you don't think, not with a statement like that.
goatsandbros ago
outbreak noun out·break | \ˈau̇t-ˌbrāk \ Definition of outbreak 1a : a sudden or violent increase in activity or currency the outbreak of war b : a sudden rise in the incidence of a disease an outbreak of measles c : a sudden increase in numbers of a harmful organism and especially an insect within a particular area an outbreak of locusts
One man does not an outbreak make.
Tb0n3 ago
Where is your evidence for that?
goatsandbros ago
There are some decent references in here, pertaining to the particular uptick in vaccine derived illnesses in the 50s. There are a bunch of articles (some from CDC, even) that discusses oral vaccine derived polio in African countries in more recent times.
In these cases, the specifics relate to a flawed method (I'm not against the principles of vaccination), but that is often the point. Especially when weird stuff happens like elites being given access to special, safer vaccines.
Vaccination itself could stand a chance of being accepted, if it were allowed to be properly and openly debated and discussed, IMO.