Chris Shaw, PhD on Injectable Aluminum

Recently we’ve been looking at aluminum, which is common to many vaccines. It’s used as an adjuvant. That means helper. Without the aluminum, the vaccine basically does not provide any long-term protection, and so my research has looked at injectable aluminum and how it might impact the nervous system. The difference between injectable aluminum versus dietary aluminum is that the aluminum that you eat is excreted fairly rapidly. Injectable aluminum, however, is meant to stick…
Russell Blaylock, MD on Vaccinating Pregnant Women

Right now there is a lot of concern in the field of neurology and neuroscience of the observation that women who develop the flu during the second trimester of their pregnancy, there’s a very high incidence of their child growing up to develop schizophrenia or autism… and so that led to this idea, well, we should vaccinate all pregnant women against the flu. Well, what I discovered in the research was that, in fact, the virus does not transfer from the mother into the baby’s brain…
Marcia Angell, MD on the Credibility of Clinical Research

No one knows the total amount [of money] provided by drug companies to physicians, but I estimate from the annual reports of the top 9 U.S.-based drug companies that it comes to tens of billions of dollars a year in North America alone. By such means, the pharmaceutical industry has gained enormous control over how doctors evaluate and use its own products. Its extensive ties to physicians, particularly senior faculty at prestigious medical schools, affect the results of research…
Larry Palevsky, MD on Herd Immunity Theory

In vaccine science, we are extrapolating or concluding that if we vaccinate a certain percentage of people, we are imparting protection on those who have not been vaccinated. And that has not been shown to be true, because the true herd immunity in theory is based on an active disease, and we know that despite what we’re taught, vaccination does not mimic the natural disease. So we cannot use the same model of herd immunity in a natural disease in the vaccination policy.
Lucija Tomljenovic, PhD on Antibody Theory

… the fact is that vaccines and vaccine adjuvants stimulate only the antibody-based immune response. This fact is the reason why vaccines do not work long-term against many viruses, because it’s the humoral immune response that confers long-term immunity. And you don’t get that with vaccinations. The problem is that people are being brainwashed into this idea that high antibody titers equal protection against diseases, and it’s simply not true. A proof of that are so many cases…
