Florida and Inconvenient Truths
Thanks to our friends from Florida who shared this article (from several months ago)! Some very important points are raised in this piece.
Preserve
religious freedom in vaccinations | Opinion
By ANDREA
DEMICHAEL
SPECIAL TO THE SUN SENTINEL |
MAY 13, 2019 | 1:37 PM
If someone wants to vaccinate so be it, but the government should
not mandate a medical treatment, period, writes Andrea DeMichael, a co-founder
of the Florida Freedom Alliance. Her organization argues that, instead of
working toward mandating a vaccine, which clearly has efficacy questions, we
should look at repealing the 1986 Childhood Vaccine Injury Act, which protects
vaccine companies, not Floridians.
The Florida Freedom Alliance would like to clarify some facts and
implied points raised in an April 16 Sun Sentinel column that
called for ending Florida’s vaccine exemptions.
The problem with the national conversation is that people
seemingly must be either for or against with no reasonable middle ground. The
government and pharmaceutical industry will not accept that people have
concerns about efficacy and safety, and want it proven.
If vaccines are so safe, then why has $4 billion been paid out to vaccine-injured families by
the government’s “special court”? And the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services estimates that less than 1 percent of
adverse reactions to vaccines are even reported.
The government and the press are not disclosing certain facts. In
measles cases, it seems very informative to disclose whether “outbreaks” are
coming from vaccine-induced strains or wild virus strains. This is a huge fact
to conceal and is incredibly disingenuous.
For example, 38 percent of the cases during the 2015 Disneyland
measles outbreak were caused by the MMR vaccine itself, according to the
Journal of Clinical Microbiology. This is really about honesty from our
government and our press.
If someone wants to vaccinate so be it, but the government should
not mandate a medical treatment, period. And we need a press corps willing to
find out all facets of the truth and report it verbatim without casting
judgment.
Let’s put some numbers to this debate. Many news sources have
repeatedly stated that this virus was eradicated and has come “roaring back.”
There are 695 people in the U.S. who have had measles and who will have
lifelong immunity once they recover. Let us reiterate that these are people who have had measles, not deaths from the
measles.
Florida supposedly has only two measles cases out of a population
of 21.3 million people. There are only two cases in the state of Florida.
Furthermore, if the vaccines are 93-97 percent effective, then who is tracking
down the 3-7 percent of people who received the vaccines but for whom it did
not work? Let’s put a number to that. That would be at least 639,000 people and
up to 1.5 million people in the State of Florida, whose vaccines didn’t work.
Why are you lambasting the 25,000 people for exercising religious
freedoms when you have a much bigger threat on your hands from the inefficiency
of the vaccine itself?
According to Pew Research, 76 percent of Floridians are religious,
which is more than 16 million people. As a proportion, 25,000 seems very low.
More importantly, freedom of religion is an integral part of our governance.
Therefore, there can be no questioning of sincere religious belief on the part
of the government. Such an attempt would violate the First Amendment and break
our governance structure, which has seemingly worked quite well for a few
hundred years.
There are valid reasons for the loss of public faith in the
vaccine product. For example, you will find out that no vaccine manufacturer is
held liable for its products, due to the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury
Act. This has turned vaccine products into a cash cow for the manufacturers
with very little liability. This has also allowed for very large marketing
budgets aimed at doctors, media outlets and elected officials. If these
manufacturers actually were held liable for their products, there would have to
be more public trust.
Now a point about herd immunity. It was originally coined in 1933
by a researcher named A.W. Hedrich, who had been studying U.S. measles patterns
from 1900–1931, before any measles vaccine was ever invented.
He observed that epidemics of the illness only occurred when less than 68
percent of children had developed a natural immunity to it. So, the herd
immunity theory was about natural disease processes. Later on, vaccinologists
adopted the phrase and increased the figure from 68 percent to 95 percent with
little to no scientific justification. Essentially, they took Hedrich’s study
and manipulated it to promote vaccine products. Sound familiar?
Contracting the natural measles virus provides lifelong immunity,
whereas the vaccine immunity, when it works, wanes. So, the CDC is already
recommending second and third booster shots for some people. Are you seeing a
pattern here?
So, instead of working toward mandating a vaccine, which clearly
has efficacy questions, we should look at repealing the 1986 Childhood Vaccine
Injury Act, which protects vaccine companies, not Floridians.
Several legislative offices have informed our organization that
they have received more phone calls and emails in opposition to the
immunization tracking bills than any other bill making its way through our
state government.
The people are making their sentiments known. The question is,
“who is listening and who is getting paid by the vaccine manufacturers?”
Andrea DeMichael is an attorney and a co-founder of the Florida Freedom Alliance. The
organization was founded to protect the fundamental rights we have as American
citizens and human beings. The goal is to unite similar organizations fighting
for individual freedoms.
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