Two of our children were vaccinated for pertussis per the CDC schedule, and both caught pertussis as toddlers. It took 3 visits to the pediatrician to determine their illness - The pediatricians themselves didn’t know that the pertussis vaccine does not prevent illness/transmission. Subsequently, the county public health office called to ask if our children were vaccinated for pertussis. We told them yes so why did they catch it? The county rep went on to blame the “unvaccinated” for driving pertussis virus evolution/ new strains.
Despite this experience, it wasn’t until the advent of the covid pandemic that our eyes were opened to the true risk/reward profiles of vaccines, the corrupted studies and the irrational justifications. While we had declined the Vitamin K drops for our children at birth and delayed the Hep B shot, we regret not seeing the truth earlier. We would have certainly done things differently. While Covid has been a traumatic experience for all (including deaths of family members), the only silver lining is that it has awakened so many to the institutional corruption and the vital need to do one’s own research and question all proposed interventions.
Thank you for your thoughtful research and compelling charts that can help us awaken others. We are grateful for all of your efforts!
We all wake up at different times, so please don't blame yourself for anything in life. We all do the best we can given the information we have at the time. Please review and consider the article I wrote on pertussis. In there is a document by Dr. Cherry that you will want to download and read. https://romanbystrianyk.substack.com/p/the-vaccine-mistake-nobody-talks
Thank you so much for this even greater clarity. I had wondered about tb as it was something that people remembered when I was a child and had obviously feared. I remember getting a tb test (which they called a BCG) and a tb shot at school in the fifties in England.
Interestingly, James Herriot, vet and author (All Creatures Great and Small) who was well known as a vet in North Yorkshire, spoke about the government rolling out the tb injections in cows and I remember drinking TT tested milk.
I noted recently on listening to these stories again, that they saw this as a good thing, not only from a payment point of view, but from a health point of view.
The other interesting aspect of these stories of veterinary practice in pre and post war rural North Yorkshire, is that it was a large animal practice with horses, cows, sheep and pigs, with pets hardly making an appearance.
The main issues for cats and dogs were accidents, broken limbs and lack of exercise. Zero mention of the cancers and other host of issues seen in pets today.
These are wonderful, entertaining glimpses of life, only slightly adapted for their storytelling value, and include a few interesting insights about the history of this occupation.
I’m curious. So death rates for scarlet fever have dropped with improved public health, which makes a ton of sense.
But have infection rates? I’m wondering as my (adult) sister caught it a couple of years ago. She was completely fine. But we marvelled as it seemed like such a Victorian ailment, and so rare. Why would improved public health make infections so rare? I can understand people being better nourished etc and fighting it off more readily, but why fewer infections? Is it spread by crowded living conditions?
Consider that “infections” from a particular microbe may be common (as in TB), but in healthy individuals, they are of little consequence. Same for pertussis and scarlet fever. All these diseases (including measles and smallpox) became very mild to the point that they were not a serious threat by the mid-1900s. Please check out this article: https://romanbystrianyk.substack.com/p/whooping-cough-and-vaccines. Have a wonderful day.
Standard thinking was always the notion that the pathogen changed (e.g., smallpox). The flaw in this thinking is that every single infectious disease became mild and unlikely to cause death at precisely the same time—smallpox, enteric fever, measles, typhoid, cholera, typhus, whooping cough, tuberculosis, etc. Also, the people who still had significant problems with various diseases were in the impoverished parts of the world, where these same diseases were still causing a great deal of deaths.
The sunspot cycle was linked to disease as far back as Hippocrates. The recent 11 year cycle began in 2019 (Covid?) And ends for UN Agenda 2030. It is peaking in 2025. It causes Influenza due to its influence on the body. Sadly Influenza disappeared and was labelled Covid. No vaccine prevents sunspot diseases, like Influenza. A good reference book is Invisible Rainbow by Firstenberg. I suspect a new disease in 2025 based on peak sunspot activity. Remember one does not die from the flu but with "flu-like" symptoms.
Two of our children were vaccinated for pertussis per the CDC schedule, and both caught pertussis as toddlers. It took 3 visits to the pediatrician to determine their illness - The pediatricians themselves didn’t know that the pertussis vaccine does not prevent illness/transmission. Subsequently, the county public health office called to ask if our children were vaccinated for pertussis. We told them yes so why did they catch it? The county rep went on to blame the “unvaccinated” for driving pertussis virus evolution/ new strains.
Despite this experience, it wasn’t until the advent of the covid pandemic that our eyes were opened to the true risk/reward profiles of vaccines, the corrupted studies and the irrational justifications. While we had declined the Vitamin K drops for our children at birth and delayed the Hep B shot, we regret not seeing the truth earlier. We would have certainly done things differently. While Covid has been a traumatic experience for all (including deaths of family members), the only silver lining is that it has awakened so many to the institutional corruption and the vital need to do one’s own research and question all proposed interventions.
Thank you for your thoughtful research and compelling charts that can help us awaken others. We are grateful for all of your efforts!
We all wake up at different times, so please don't blame yourself for anything in life. We all do the best we can given the information we have at the time. Please review and consider the article I wrote on pertussis. In there is a document by Dr. Cherry that you will want to download and read. https://romanbystrianyk.substack.com/p/the-vaccine-mistake-nobody-talks
Thank you so much for this even greater clarity. I had wondered about tb as it was something that people remembered when I was a child and had obviously feared. I remember getting a tb test (which they called a BCG) and a tb shot at school in the fifties in England.
Interestingly, James Herriot, vet and author (All Creatures Great and Small) who was well known as a vet in North Yorkshire, spoke about the government rolling out the tb injections in cows and I remember drinking TT tested milk.
I noted recently on listening to these stories again, that they saw this as a good thing, not only from a payment point of view, but from a health point of view.
The other interesting aspect of these stories of veterinary practice in pre and post war rural North Yorkshire, is that it was a large animal practice with horses, cows, sheep and pigs, with pets hardly making an appearance.
The main issues for cats and dogs were accidents, broken limbs and lack of exercise. Zero mention of the cancers and other host of issues seen in pets today.
These are wonderful, entertaining glimpses of life, only slightly adapted for their storytelling value, and include a few interesting insights about the history of this occupation.
I strongly suspect that pet owners, in their loving desire to do the best for their beloved animal friends, are vaccinating them to death.
I’m curious. So death rates for scarlet fever have dropped with improved public health, which makes a ton of sense.
But have infection rates? I’m wondering as my (adult) sister caught it a couple of years ago. She was completely fine. But we marvelled as it seemed like such a Victorian ailment, and so rare. Why would improved public health make infections so rare? I can understand people being better nourished etc and fighting it off more readily, but why fewer infections? Is it spread by crowded living conditions?
Consider that “infections” from a particular microbe may be common (as in TB), but in healthy individuals, they are of little consequence. Same for pertussis and scarlet fever. All these diseases (including measles and smallpox) became very mild to the point that they were not a serious threat by the mid-1900s. Please check out this article: https://romanbystrianyk.substack.com/p/whooping-cough-and-vaccines. Have a wonderful day.
Thanks for the response! So it has become milder (due to pathogen change), or we have become healthier so it seems milder?
Standard thinking was always the notion that the pathogen changed (e.g., smallpox). The flaw in this thinking is that every single infectious disease became mild and unlikely to cause death at precisely the same time—smallpox, enteric fever, measles, typhoid, cholera, typhus, whooping cough, tuberculosis, etc. Also, the people who still had significant problems with various diseases were in the impoverished parts of the world, where these same diseases were still causing a great deal of deaths.
The sunspot cycle was linked to disease as far back as Hippocrates. The recent 11 year cycle began in 2019 (Covid?) And ends for UN Agenda 2030. It is peaking in 2025. It causes Influenza due to its influence on the body. Sadly Influenza disappeared and was labelled Covid. No vaccine prevents sunspot diseases, like Influenza. A good reference book is Invisible Rainbow by Firstenberg. I suspect a new disease in 2025 based on peak sunspot activity. Remember one does not die from the flu but with "flu-like" symptoms.