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edistojim ago

Did Smallpox and polio cause more harm than the vaccine? Simple answers to simple questions.

qwop ago

You're drawing your conclusions on the premise that vaccines were the ones that wiped out polio and smallpox.

Now I will tell you a simple question to think about: what if it wasn't so?

If you start to dig into the data, you will find information that is going to contradict the general narrative of this wipeout story. Like the researcher says in his interview:

Q: It is said that the smallpox vaccine wiped out smallpox in England.
A: Yes. But when you study the available statistics, you get another picture.

You see, you assume what you've been told all your life by the vaccine industry is true. The problem is: it isn't. And therefore it means all your previous conclusions need to be re-evaluated. It's called waking up from the hypnosis.

heretolearn ago

got some links to read up on that

qwop ago

Usually when I provide links like this, people don't bother to read them. There are plenty of articles written about the real history of smallpox. It's not difficult to find them any more at this point. Here's a quote from one:

By 1919, England and Wales had become one of the least vaccinated countries, and had only 28 deaths from smallpox, out of a population of 37.8 million people. By contrast, during that same year, out of a population of 10 million — all triply vaccinated over the prior 6 years — the Philippine Islands registered 47,368 deaths from smallpox. The epidemic came after the culmination of a ruthless 15-year compulsory vaccination campaign by the U.S., in which the native population — young and old — were forcibly vaccinated (several times), literally against their will. In a speech condemning the smallpox vaccine reprinted in the Congressional Record of 12/21/37, William Howard Hay, M.D. said, “… the Philippines suffered the worst attack of smallpox, the worst epidemic three times over, that had ever occurred in the history of the islands, and it was almost three times as fatal. The death rate ran as high as 60 percent in certain areas, where formerly it had been 10 and 15 percent.” In the province of Rizal, for example, smallpox mortalities increased from an average 3 percent (before vaccination) to 67 percent during 1918 and 1919. All told, after 10 years (1911-1920) of a compulsory U.S. program which administered 25 million vaccinations to the Philippine population of 10 million, there had been 170,000 cases, and more than 75,000 deaths from smallpox.

Now are you just saying you're going to read up on it, or will you actually do it?
https://naturodoc.com/truth_re_smallpox_vaccine/

Actual quotes from doctors at the time about the vaccine:
http://whale.to/vaccine/quotes10.html

Articles and books written on the subject:
http://whale.to/vaccine/smallpox3.html

You can find numerous other articles on the topic too, but you have to put in the work to find them. Don't use Google, because they scrub their results. Now the question is, are you willing to put in the work?

heretolearn ago

thank you.