0
0

Anti-vax parents throwing measles parties


 invite response                
2015 Feb 13, 8:35am   792 views  14 comments

by tovarichpeter   ➕follow (7)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.theonion.com/articles/report-antivaxxer-parents-considering-throwing-mea,37997/

Local media in California have reported that some anti-vaxxer parents are considering throwing “measles parties” at which unvaccinated children can come in contact with infected children in order to contract the disease and build up a natural immunity.

Comments 1 - 14 of 14        Search these comments

1   Patrick   2023 Jun 28, 6:44pm  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/measles-and-weasels-wednesday-june?publication_id=463409&post_id=131649738&isFreemail=true


Speaking of cancer, Medical News Today recently ran a very surprising and encouraging story headlined, “Dose of Measles Virus Destroys Woman’s Incurable Cancer.”

In what they describe as a proof of principle study, Mayo Clinic researchers were able to keep a woman with deadly multiple myeloma – an incurable bone marrow cancer – free of all signs of living cancer cells for over 6 months by giving her just one extremely high dose of measles virus directly into the bloodstream.

The study included two patients, and both responded, but one of the patients experienced a complete remission.

In short, the researchers found that measles virus has cancer-suppressing properties. Senior author Dr. Angela Dispenzieri, a multiple myeloma expert, said the measles virus essentially makes the cancer cells fuse together and explode. The treatment also appears to trigger another lasting benefit:

“There’s some suggestion that it may be stimulating the patient’s immune system to further recognize the cancer cells or the myeloma cells and help mop that up more effectively than otherwise.”

Lead author Dr. Stephen Russell said they have recently started considering “a single shot cure for cancer, and that’s our goal with this therapy.”

Anyway, it’s terrific news, and they need to hurry up. Because you know why.


It's been known for at least a century that some viruses kill some cancers. Maybe getting measles can be a good thing at times.
2   richwicks   2023 Jun 29, 1:24am  

tovarichpeter says

http://www.theonion.com/articles/report-antivaxxer-parents-considering-throwing-mea,37997/

Local media in California have reported that some anti-vaxxer parents are considering throwing “measles parties” at which unvaccinated children can come in contact with infected children in order to contract the disease and build up a natural immunity.




I went through this as a kid, with measles and chickenpox.
3   AmericanKulak   2023 Jun 29, 1:51am  

The death rate from measles dropped over 90% in England & Wales in the century before the virus was first isolated in the 1950s or the vaccine developed in the late 1950s.

Garbage Man and the Water Purification Plant worker are far, far more important than any doctor or pharma researcher.
5   Ceffer   2025 Mar 2, 11:36am  

I had measles as a kid. It itched. I would have it ten times over rather than have the vax.
6   Patrick   2025 Mar 3, 3:41pm  

https://www.usmortality.com/p/since-2000-measles-vaccines-may-have


Since 2000, Measles Vaccines May Have Caused 16x More Deaths Than Measles

The Recent “Measles Outbreak” Scare Appears to Be a Big Pharma Campaign, Unsupported by Data. ...

No randomized placebo-controlled trials for measles vaccination appear to exist. The renowned Cochrane Institute, while assessing measles vaccination as effective, rates the evidence as only low to moderate certainty, relying solely on observational studies rather than the gold-standard placebo-controlled trials.



7   Eric Holder   2025 Mar 3, 4:25pm  

Patrick says

Since 2000, Measles Vaccines May Have Caused 16x More Deaths Than Measles


RFK wants to kill 16x more kids than would've died from Measels and turn the survivors into autists:



8   Patrick   2025 Mar 5, 11:26am  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/inform-me-wednesday-march-5-2025


Yesterday, we discussed HHS Secretary Robert Kennedy, Jr.’s op-ed about the Texas measles “outbreak” and the MMR vaccine, and I urged you to withhold judgment and see what HHS does. We only had to wait one day. The headlines were, as they say, a target-rich environment. I choe the far-left New Republic, which shrieked: “RFK Jr.’s Solution for Measles Outbreak Has Health Experts Horrified.” If ‘health experts’ were horrified, you know it had to be good.

“What we're trying to do,” Kennedy explained, “is restore our faith in government and not particularly dictate what people ought to be doing.” Specifically, the CDC — under Kennedy’s direction — sent teams to Texas bearing Budesonide (a 30-year old steroid), Clarithromycin (an antibiotic), and cod liver oil, “which has high concentrations of Vitamin A and Vitamin D.”

But what about the vaccines!

Last Friday, terrifying public health gatekeepers even more, the CDC quietly added a section on Vitamin A to its measles webpage, explaining the supplement may be given to infants and children under supervision as part of supportive management. The new language provided dosing recommendations and explained that severe measles cases requiring hospitalization should “be managed with vitamin A.”

But! But! Nobody makes money from cod liver oil!!

The new measles guidance was part of a larger push that Kennedy hinted at in his op-ed. The Vitamin A advice was just a small part of many recent updates to CDC guidance about “therapeutic medications.” The fact that this kind of basic medical information was missing, and that adding it is at all controversial, proves just how uselessly vaccine-obsessed the CDC had become.

“The CDC is actively supporting Texas state health officials and will be on the ground Tuesday working with the frontline health care providers,” said Kennedy’s principal deputy chief of staff Stefanie Spear. A Washington Post article reported that HHS is, in fact, sending 2,000 doses of measles vaccine to Texas — for anybody who wants them — along with shipments of Vitamin A.

In Gaines County, Texas, the center of the measles outbreak, WaPo reported “residents have embraced vitamin A and cod liver oil as crucial ways of getting through the surge.” Gaines County is home to a large Mennonite community— Christian anabaptists, of mostly German descent. They accept modern medicine but “prefer home remedies and traditional healing methods.”

In other words, the CDC is responding to the needs of the community rather than to the diktats of white-coated overlords.

The WaPo’s article was a circus of the usual suspects, like bowtied-wonder and vaccine developer Peter Hotez. They were all extremely concerned about the risks of Vitamin A. You can overdose on it! It can make you think you don’t need a vaccine! Of course, there wasn’t a single reference in any of the corporate media articles to any risks posed by the MMR vaccine.

💉 In light of these fascinating developments, we can now scrutinize more closely the carefully selected words in Kennedy’s op-ed. For a deeper dive, read this encouraging Substack by Jenna McCarthy, which several alert C&C readers recommended in yesterday’s comments section. But I’d like to focus on a single sentence that I believe is key to unlocking Kennedy’s vaccine strategy: informed consent.

Here’s the most important paragraph from Kennedy’s op-ed:

As healthcare providers, community leaders, and policymakers, we have a shared responsibility to
protect public health. This includes ensuring that accurate information about vaccine safety and
efficacy is disseminated. We must engage with communities to understand their concerns, provide
culturally competent education, and make vaccines readily accessible for all those who want them.

Health freedom advocates were badly triggered by that final sentence, which ends “make vaccines readily available for all those who want them.” It seemed like an endorsement. But standing alone, it is an uncontroversial throwaway line. Of course, in a free country, people have the right to choose their own health care, including vaccines — so long as they know what they are choosing.

Our biggest problem with vaccines isn’t their bare existence. It’s the government-fueled disinformation and all the lies about their outsized risks and underwhelming efficacy, which is why the immediately preceding sentence was so important. Kennedy isn’t going to charge right up the drawbridge leading to Big Pharma’s best-defended castle. He’s diving into the moat, swimming up the septic tunnel, and planting a bomb.

“This includes ensuring that accurate information about vaccine safety and efficacy is disseminated.” That key sentence, which itself sounds like a throwaway, includes a critical key word: accurate. Accurate information about safety and efficacy.

I promise you that Big Pharma understands the sinister significance of the word, “accurate.” Those eight letters drip with dreadful provenance. Kennedy’s smiling op-ed, seemingly spreading sunshine on the wonders of vaccine science, is a mask. “There is a dagger in men’s smiles,” Donalbain observed in Macbeth, and never was that more true than of Kennedy’s cleverly constructed jab endorsement.

Here’s why. If parents fully understood the real risks and relatively minor benefits when considering whether to vaccinate their healthy babies, they might think twice. They might hesitate. “Here’s the Gardasil shot!” the pediatrician chirpily suggests, “which won’t prevent uterine cancer in you son— since, haha, he doesn’t have a uterus … that we know of! But under the crazy new HHS guidelines, I’m legally required to tell you there’s a tiny chance that he could, well, sort of die from it. Unlikely, but it’s possible! Plus, we have no idea about the long-term risks, but who has time for that? So—what do you say? Ready for that injection?”

In a very Trumplike fashion, Kennedy is flipping the script on them. Kennedy is turning the concept of vaccine hesitancy inside out. He’s saying, you should hesitate, at least long enough to learn what you’re actually getting and what it might cost you.

Hesitation isn’t ignorance. It’s intelligence. It’s the natural instinct of any rational person informed about a medical intervention that carries risk, uncertain long-term effects, and a track record of regulatory corruption. That they concealed critical information under a blanket of hand-waving and trust-the-science™ — while branding informed consent as a thought-crime — gives the whole game away.

Far beyond merely challenging the narrative, Kennedy is ripping up the rulebook and rewriting the instructions.

Under fair rules, they’ll lose— every single round. Here comes the needle of truth, and there might be some injection-site discomfort.

But don’t worry— it’s only going to hurt for a very long time.

See? I told you. Let the man work.
9   stereotomy   2025 Mar 5, 6:10pm  

I had measles, mumps, chicken pox, probably rubella. Later I had Strep throat - that was fucking painful. If anyone gets this, insist on IV antibiotics - it knocks it back in 12 hours. Scabies - the worst itch a human can experience.

Now, thanks to the miracle of the scientific method, we have ivermectin. It cures viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections. It's the only thing I have ever taken that can stop a cold sore in its tracks - it's truly the shit.

Get it while you can - if the Trump tariffs shut down the small package trade, no more cheap ivermectin.
12   PeopleUnited   2025 Mar 8, 5:24am  

Patrick says






The Antichrist is pro microchip.

Revelation 13:16-17
King James Version
16 And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:

17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.
13   WookieMan   2025 Mar 8, 6:15am  

stereotomy says

Later I had Strep throat - that was fucking painful.

I had strep about 6 years ago. Couldn't drink water or eat for 3 days. Ended up fainting and cracking my head due to dehydration. An ambulance ride and some staples in the head followed with IV had me better in 24 hours. I concur with your assessment on strep, it sucks.
14   mell   2025 Mar 8, 6:47am  

WookieMan says

stereotomy says


Later I had Strep throat - that was fucking painful.

I had strep about 6 years ago. Couldn't drink water or eat for 3 days. Ended up fainting and cracking my head due to dehydration. An ambulance ride and some staples in the head followed with IV had me better in 24 hours. I concur with your assessment on strep, it sucks.

If you don't have any meds ready, immediately at first sign of hurting throat chew on raw garlic and let the juice coat the throat, fairly effective

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste