Once again, this year, Americans are being warned that B pertussis whooping cough cases are on the rise and society is being endangered by parents who don’t vaccinate their children. That myth goes back to the early 1980s when parents of DPT-injured children in the U.S. were calling for a less reactive pertussis vaccine, because our children were dying and being brain injured by the crude whole-cell pertussis vaccine and especially toxic vaccine that is still being given today in some other countries. In the late 20th century, we were accused of causing whooping cough outbreaks just by talking about crippling DPT vaccine reactions—very similar to the accusations leveled against people who talked about crippling COVID shot reactions that led to widespread censorship of freedom of speech in the 21st century.
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2 Responses
Barbara,
Your presentation was excellent…as usual. You know more about vaccines than just about anyone. After reading, “DPT. Shot In the Dark” a book authored by you and Harris Coulter, Ph.D. I gained the needed courage to pursue the vaccine issue. My goal has always been to protect babies and children from child abuse and legalized murder…which is what vaccination really is.
Jamie Murphy, author of “What Every Parent Should Know about Childhood Immunization” (1993)
For treatment ideas, I recommend reading Suzanne Humphries (co-author of “Dissolving Illusions”) and her published writings on this specific matter. For instance, there is an article from 2018 titled: “Sodium Ascorbate Treatment of Whooping Cough” that is easy to find online. One way to access it is a simple Internet search of: suzanne humphries orthomolecular medicine , using DuckDuckGo (search engine). Speaking just as a layperson, I found it to be highly detailed and very informative.
It is not an easy disease to treat, and she acknowledges that early in the article. She has a wealth of knowledge and impressive credentials, for those not already familiar with her. In the article, she covers many aspects about pertussis (a.k.a., Whooping Cough), including the effectiveness (or lack thereof, usually) of different methods of treating, ameliorating, or trying to prevent it, that are likely to be of interest to those who found this video highly useful and informative. Which I certainly did also!
Good work, Barbara.