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@nosat @TURBORETARD9000 @HunDriverWidow @hittitezombie @gorskon @ankokukishi @doctorsex @m0rglee @Quellek @Gab_Refugee @WoodenDoorInspector @jeffcliff @LaylaAlexandrovna >Polio cases dropped before the vaccine was released
Yes, and part of this was the classification changed so that they separated non-polio diseases out when it was previously combined with like dysentery(?) and a few others. But polio is also the perfect example of how just because you can doesn't mean you should, and how theres a serious need to look at systemic stuff when it comes to disease "eradication" plans— a lesson the medical establishment thought they didn't need to care about come COVID.
Polio is a disease that causes diarrhea and a stomach bug in small children (babies/toddlers) and can range from temporary to permanent damage in older children and adults. The vaccine for polio caused people to "shed" polio for weeks. You start vaccinating people, and all of sudden you could have polio cases in adults all over the place. Not to mention the fact that no vaccine is 100% effective. Maybe you got a small town with only 1,000 people on a municipal water supply and few if any had exposure to polio in their life. If the vaccine properly works in 98% of people, congratulations on successfully paralyzing up to 20 people if water treatment is not in place. And if anyone thinks I'm pulling this from my rear, read up on The Cutter Incident on the NIH website.
>Causes 40,000 cases of polio
>200 children with varying degrees of paralysis
>10 deaths
That's just what they admit to and ignores the secondary infections. People talked about COVID vaccine shedding, which doesn't make sense since it wasn't a live virus (maybe the spike protein was shed but who cares), but this was a legit real issue.