Oh the irony! US unvaccinated teen who sued school for ban, gets chicken pox! | |
Toejamsoup
User ID: 77455782 New Zealand 05/09/2019 06:38 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 72063207 United Kingdom 05/09/2019 06:40 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77401508 Switzerland 05/09/2019 06:41 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77104556 United States 05/09/2019 06:42 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. |
Katipo2017
(OP) User ID: 58459581 New Zealand 05/09/2019 06:53 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. Don’t get me wrong, I got my immunity to chicken pox, the old fashioned way too. The problem is, that method gives you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. I got shingles a few years ago. Fortunately it only hit me in the chest, but it still hurt like hell. I was out of action for a month. Last Edited by Katipo on 05/09/2019 06:54 AM Any sarcasm in this post is purely intentional. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 73641902 United States 05/09/2019 06:56 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77627519 Australia 05/09/2019 06:59 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. Don’t get me wrong, I got my immunity to chicken pox, the old fashioned way too. The problem is, that method gives you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. I got shingles a few years ago. Fortunately it only hit me in the chest, but it still hurt like hell. I was out of action for a month. it might also be that it is poor nutrition and environmental stressors that will give you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. |
Wondering Mind
User ID: 73265267 United States 05/09/2019 07:02 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. Don’t get me wrong, I got my immunity to chicken pox, the old fashioned way too. The problem is, that method gives you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. I got shingles a few years ago. Fortunately it only hit me in the chest, but it still hurt like hell. I was out of action for a month. You can get shingles with the chicken pox, our son did. His dad never had the chicken pox and neither did his sister and both of them got the shingles as adults. When our son got the chicken pox he set off my husband's shingles and then he got shingles off his dad. He had a terrible break out with both of them, got sick throwing up and all broke out at the same time on his birthday. Last Edited by Wondering Mind on 05/09/2019 07:03 AM The most precious things are the simple things in life, always present in the simplest of minds. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 73641902 United States 05/09/2019 07:03 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. Don’t get me wrong, I got my immunity to chicken pox, the old fashioned way too. The problem is, that method gives you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. I got shingles a few years ago. Fortunately it only hit me in the chest, but it still hurt like hell. I was out of action for a month. Science is silly. The authors of a 2002 study warned that mass chicken pox vaccination would spur a serious shingles epidemic that would strike more than half of those who were between the ages of 10 and 44 at the time it was introduced. Now, research published in the Annals of Clinical Pathology claims that the CDC and the Los Angeles Department of Health Services actually colluded to bury research showing a link between its Universal Varicella Vaccination Program and the national rise in shingles cases. Author Gary S. Goldman is a former research analyst for the Los Angeles Department of Health, and he monitored the introduction of the chicken pox vaccine. He says that by 2000, he was hearing a lot of anecdotal accounts from school nurses about an inexplicable rise in shingles cases among students. He found that the vaccine was not only accelerating the recurrence of shingles among children who had naturally gotten chicken pox, but it was also boosting the chances of adults getting shingles. Goldman says the CDC stopped him from making his data public. He listed 23 actions they took to try to downplay his findings, including attributing them to incorrect subgroups, statistically disguising them, manipulating their own data, printing selective studies, and pressuring the editors of journals into delaying the publication of his work. He recounts how they masked the upsetting trend by averaging the vaccine’s effectiveness over several years instead of listing it year by year, and he says they also tried to discredit him. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 73641902 United States 05/09/2019 07:05 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | so, he got chickenpox, and now has natural, life-long immunity without having to take a poisonous injection? Quoting: Anonymous Coward 77401508 what's your point? i had chickenpox, along with most of the people i grew up, and went to school with, and it wasn't at all an issue. enjoy your vaccines, moran, you deserve them. Don’t get me wrong, I got my immunity to chicken pox, the old fashioned way too. The problem is, that method gives you a good chance of getting shingles later in life. I got shingles a few years ago. Fortunately it only hit me in the chest, but it still hurt like hell. I was out of action for a month. Science is silly. The authors of a 2002 study warned that mass chicken pox vaccination would spur a serious shingles epidemic that would strike more than half of those who were between the ages of 10 and 44 at the time it was introduced. Now, research published in the Annals of Clinical Pathology claims that the CDC and the Los Angeles Department of Health Services actually colluded to bury research showing a link between its Universal Varicella Vaccination Program and the national rise in shingles cases. Author Gary S. Goldman is a former research analyst for the Los Angeles Department of Health, and he monitored the introduction of the chicken pox vaccine. He says that by 2000, he was hearing a lot of anecdotal accounts from school nurses about an inexplicable rise in shingles cases among students. He found that the vaccine was not only accelerating the recurrence of shingles among children who had naturally gotten chicken pox, but it was also boosting the chances of adults getting shingles. Goldman says the CDC stopped him from making his data public. He listed 23 actions they took to try to downplay his findings, including attributing them to incorrect subgroups, statistically disguising them, manipulating their own data, printing selective studies, and pressuring the editors of journals into delaying the publication of his work. He recounts how they masked the upsetting trend by averaging the vaccine’s effectiveness over several years instead of listing it year by year, and he says they also tried to discredit him. Oh the irony indeed. |