Ebook: Saying No to Vaccines; A Resource Guide for All Ages
Author: Sherri Tenpenny
- Genre: Medicine // immunology
- Tags: Medicine pandemic epidemic politics corruption vaccination Immunization vaccine ingredients CDC Health Activism Germ Theory Disease Infectious diseases depopulation mercury poisoning mystery diseases vaccines symptoms methylmercury neurological damage Covid-19 corona virus plandemic death rate symptoms red pill wwg1wga
- Year: 2008
- Language: English
- pdf
Do you believe:
• Vaccines are responsible for the eradication of diseases, such as polio and smallpox.
• Vaccines have been proven to be safe for the individual.
• When a vaccine is called “effective,” it’s the same as being “protective.”
• Vaccines are “relatively harmless"
If you said "yes" to any of these and would like more informaion to confront that answer, read on. The author has this to say:
• I oppose the one-size-fits-all public health policy imposed by state rules and enforced by physicians and public health employees.
• I oppose a system that forces parents to make decisions based on fear. A physician who forces a parent to vaccinate by using threats, such as reporting the parent to Children’s Services for medical neglect or threatening to discharge a family from the medical practice for not vaccinating, is not the physician you want to care for your family. I am opposed to those behaviors.
• I oppose public health policy that demands the rights of the individual must become secondary to injecting a product that can have deadly consequences. Public health officials credit vaccination alone for low infection rates and use persuasion and coercion to enforce vaccination policy.
• I support the freedom to refuse any medical procedure, including the right to refuse a vaccination. Once a person understands the real risks of vaccine-preventable infections and the real risks of vaccines designed to prevent them, I support the person’s right to make a choice regarding which risk they are willing to accept.
• I am in favor of fully informed consent, which means giving a person the full range of pros and cons about a medical option and then allowing the option to refuse.
• I am pro-information. Most information distributed to the general public by government organizations about the benefits of vaccination is incomplete at best and, at worst, deceptive. However, those that challenge the official stance about vaccination are marginalized as “anti-vaccine eccentrics” or “conspiracy theorists.” The premises behind vaccination need to be challenged. A debate cannot occur if questioning is not allowed.
• I believe that vaccines can cause more harm to the health of the individual—and subsequently to the community as a whole—than the good claimed by doctors and public health officials.
I am determined to share the information I have discovered because I have witnessed firsthand the destruction vaccines can cause children and their families. I have seen the pain in the eyes of parents, desperate to get their baby back to the way he was the day before be received multiple vaccines. I have cried with broken-hearted parents who wished they had taken time to investigate the risks of vaccines before they were forced to make an on-the-spot decision about vaccinating. With a little more information, they would have chosen differently.
• Vaccines are responsible for the eradication of diseases, such as polio and smallpox.
• Vaccines have been proven to be safe for the individual.
• When a vaccine is called “effective,” it’s the same as being “protective.”
• Vaccines are “relatively harmless"
If you said "yes" to any of these and would like more informaion to confront that answer, read on. The author has this to say:
• I oppose the one-size-fits-all public health policy imposed by state rules and enforced by physicians and public health employees.
• I oppose a system that forces parents to make decisions based on fear. A physician who forces a parent to vaccinate by using threats, such as reporting the parent to Children’s Services for medical neglect or threatening to discharge a family from the medical practice for not vaccinating, is not the physician you want to care for your family. I am opposed to those behaviors.
• I oppose public health policy that demands the rights of the individual must become secondary to injecting a product that can have deadly consequences. Public health officials credit vaccination alone for low infection rates and use persuasion and coercion to enforce vaccination policy.
• I support the freedom to refuse any medical procedure, including the right to refuse a vaccination. Once a person understands the real risks of vaccine-preventable infections and the real risks of vaccines designed to prevent them, I support the person’s right to make a choice regarding which risk they are willing to accept.
• I am in favor of fully informed consent, which means giving a person the full range of pros and cons about a medical option and then allowing the option to refuse.
• I am pro-information. Most information distributed to the general public by government organizations about the benefits of vaccination is incomplete at best and, at worst, deceptive. However, those that challenge the official stance about vaccination are marginalized as “anti-vaccine eccentrics” or “conspiracy theorists.” The premises behind vaccination need to be challenged. A debate cannot occur if questioning is not allowed.
• I believe that vaccines can cause more harm to the health of the individual—and subsequently to the community as a whole—than the good claimed by doctors and public health officials.
I am determined to share the information I have discovered because I have witnessed firsthand the destruction vaccines can cause children and their families. I have seen the pain in the eyes of parents, desperate to get their baby back to the way he was the day before be received multiple vaccines. I have cried with broken-hearted parents who wished they had taken time to investigate the risks of vaccines before they were forced to make an on-the-spot decision about vaccinating. With a little more information, they would have chosen differently.
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