Parents: vaccinate or not?
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What would be the reasons not to? Are parents concerned about the side-effects?
Best wishes, Hans
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I've read that some people are blaiming Autism on vaccinations. I think that's a bunch of horse- puckey myself. X| I think they're crazy to not vaccinate their children.
WE ARE DYSLEXIC OF BORG. Refutance is systile. Your a$$ will be laminated. There are 10 kinds of people in the world: People who know binary and people who don't.
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I'm sitting here watching The Doctors and there are some mothers who are just screaming against vaccinations. Just curious to ask the parents here how you feel on the subject.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
Not only vaccinate but make sure they play in the dirt regularly so they build up a proper immune system. There are far too many "bubble babies" these days -- kids that are so doted over and over-protected that they have virtually no resistance to anything.
"It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson
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I'm sitting here watching The Doctors and there are some mothers who are just screaming against vaccinations. Just curious to ask the parents here how you feel on the subject.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
Vaccinate. Leah (4 months old) has had four shots now and has two more to go.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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So long as there are good statistics showing their effectiveness then definitely, I'll get 'em (and so will my kid). I just run an elecromagnet over the injection site to kill the tracking chip, so all is good :) Cheers, Drew.
Drew Stainton wrote:
I just run an elecromagnet over the injection site to kill the tracking chip, so all is good Smile
That's OK. Their DNA waste-water tracking system will still work...
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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No doubt about that, but there's an awful lot of fake science being done that is taken seriously - ddt, saccharine, global warming - all in the name of ideology or big money. Pharmaceutical companies, and the doctors they pay to tout their products, are above that sort of thing in exactly the same way that fish are above the sky.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
No doubt about that, but there's an awful lot of fake science being done that is taken seriously - ddt, saccharine, global warming ...
How is global warming fake science ? Global warming and cooling periods have occurred naturally for millions of years. There is no doubt that we are currently in a period of global warming. The question that is still debated is how much of it if any is caused by humans. Most scientists agree that humans are at least partly to blame for speeding up the rate of global warming. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming[^]
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Drew Stainton wrote:
I just run an elecromagnet over the injection site to kill the tracking chip, so all is good Smile
That's OK. Their DNA waste-water tracking system will still work...
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Not only vaccinate but make sure they play in the dirt regularly so they build up a proper immune system. There are far too many "bubble babies" these days -- kids that are so doted over and over-protected that they have virtually no resistance to anything.
"It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson
My parents let me eat a shongololo when I was a kid. If anything it only made me stronger, I rarely get sick. I hope Leah eats her shongololo one day. I don't want a bubble-baby.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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My parents let me eat a shongololo when I was a kid. If anything it only made me stronger, I rarely get sick. I hope Leah eats her shongololo one day. I don't want a bubble-baby.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
I'm almost afraid to ask but ... what is shongololo? Please don't tell me, you ate millipedes.
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Roger Wright wrote:
No doubt about that, but there's an awful lot of fake science being done that is taken seriously - ddt, saccharine, global warming ...
How is global warming fake science ? Global warming and cooling periods have occurred naturally for millions of years. There is no doubt that we are currently in a period of global warming. The question that is still debated is how much of it if any is caused by humans. Most scientists agree that humans are at least partly to blame for speeding up the rate of global warming. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_warming[^]
I don't doubt the cyclic nature of climate; it's the human influence I find little evidence to support. When I was growing up we were in imminent danger of facing another global ice age, but the media wasn't quite as noisy back then. Both predictions are based on the same dubious data. What we need to focus on is learning to cope with inevitable variations in climate. Any dreams of influencing it is pure arrogance multiplied by presumption; we're not significant enough for Earth to notice.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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I'm almost afraid to ask but ... what is shongololo? Please don't tell me, you ate millipedes.
Douglas Troy wrote:
Please don't tell me, you ate millipedes
Yes, yes I did. They're big suckers in Africa.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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I'm sitting here watching The Doctors and there are some mothers who are just screaming against vaccinations. Just curious to ask the parents here how you feel on the subject.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
We have vaccinated all 3 of our girls. As a parent, I am always concerned about things like this: do we really know enough, are "they" telling us the truth, etc...etc... If it's really a concern, read everything you can on the subject. Educate yourself on the arguments that both sides have (for and against) and then make your decision. At least that way, you can go into it knowing you've done your homework. But read the research, read what pediatricians say, read what other doctors say, don't watch some TV show and make your decisions based on that ... TV shows are all about ratings, not about truth, IMHO.
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Douglas Troy wrote:
Please don't tell me, you ate millipedes
Yes, yes I did. They're big suckers in Africa.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
So, I have to ask ... did it taste like Chicken?
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So, I have to ask ... did it taste like Chicken?
No, no it didn't. Gooey inside with a crunchy shell and stringy legs*. The goo was a bit salty but otherwise quite tasteless. Poor shongololo, it didn't deserve to get eaten... * Like a prawn
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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No, no it didn't. Gooey inside with a crunchy shell and stringy legs*. The goo was a bit salty but otherwise quite tasteless. Poor shongololo, it didn't deserve to get eaten... * Like a prawn
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
Salty uh? Must be high in sodium. Oh well, I'll have to scratch that off my things to try to eat list. High sodium's bad for you ya know. :rolleyes:
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I'm sitting here watching The Doctors and there are some mothers who are just screaming against vaccinations. Just curious to ask the parents here how you feel on the subject.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
Definitely vaccinate. The possibilities of long-term health problems from the 'vaccinated' diseases are far greater than from any possible side-effects from the vaccine itself. My son had the misfortune to emigrate after six months of UK vaccines, and therefore needed an extra lot for the different bugs there have here in NZ. Even though it was more jabs for him, we didn't hesitate to get them all done.
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Is there even a question? Vaccinate of course! Not doing so is like signing a death sentence for the kids - and you'd be helping to spread diseases.
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What would be the reasons not to? Are parents concerned about the side-effects?
Best wishes, Hans
[CodeProject Forum Guidelines] [How To Ask A Question] [My Articles]
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I'm sitting here watching The Doctors and there are some mothers who are just screaming against vaccinations. Just curious to ask the parents here how you feel on the subject.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
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Vaccinate, in my opinion. But you can request that the MMR (the one in debate) shot be broken into three distinct shots, instead of one whiz-bang do-it-all shot. Please discuss the entire issue in depth with your children's pediatrician so that you can make the choice with all the information you can. I've been following the debate/discussion on this very closely, so that I could determine what to do for my little ones as well. I had both little ones vaccinated, even with the MMR vaccination. The potential for complications from the diseases that the children could contract without the vaccinations are great. And since schools are beginning to see outbreaks of these diseases once again, I decided to protect my children from the diseases. One of the theories that I've read concerning the autism-link (and the link has been disproven supposedly, but who knows)is that there may be a gene whose expression is triggered either by the high fever that may result as a reaction to the vaccination, or perhaps by the combination of the three shots. The gene's expression might be triggered otherwise maybe not. Other studies say there is absolutely no link. What confuses it even more are the heartbreaking stories from parents who have even delayed the MMR shot, and then right after child's reaction to the shot, language never returns (which means the autism wasn't expressed during the usual 12 month to 2 year time span, but later, which defies the coincidental timing argument). It's difficult to make an informed decision. I tried to make mine on a logical basis, and not a knee-jerk emotional one, but some of the parents' stories are difficult to explain. I am mentioning these items not to claim to know oh-so-much, but to mention the different camps of thinking. I have to run to pick up my children, so I can't follow this thread until tomorrow, but I am very interested to hear others' opinions as well. Take care all. blueSprite
I don't have kids myself. I have heard issues with the MMR combo. One doctor said the doctor should look at the family history of auto immune diseases and dosages should vary depending on size where right now they are a one size fits all.
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
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I don't doubt the cyclic nature of climate; it's the human influence I find little evidence to support. When I was growing up we were in imminent danger of facing another global ice age, but the media wasn't quite as noisy back then. Both predictions are based on the same dubious data. What we need to focus on is learning to cope with inevitable variations in climate. Any dreams of influencing it is pure arrogance multiplied by presumption; we're not significant enough for Earth to notice.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
we're not significant enough for Earth to notice.
We are. Humanity has devastated the natural kingdom both on-land and in the oceans. We have desertified vast tracts of land, poisoned many more and denuded even greater areas. Water sources have been corrupted and cities have created local weather phenomenons (doubtful this has any long term or significant impact however.) The ozone layer was undoubtedly affected by man's pollutants. During your lifetime we stood on the brink of a nuclear winter which would have had global effects. The bed-rock of Earth may remain unaffected but Earth is not just its bed-rock. It is a living whole. Nor is it just the long-term average with blips of abundance and death. There is the here and now and how we have influenced it. For awhile I used to think extinction of certain animals was sad but inevitable. If the white rhino could not survive in a changing habitat then why preserve it? It would die off anyway. Keep some in a zoo and forget about the wild ones. But then I saw human arrogance encroaching on other living things' environments and realised we should strive to be better, for their sake and ours. If we just keep on rolling as we do now it doesn't matter if we are impacting the climate or not, we'll simply be a poorer species for having trampled other species under our needless soles. We can adapt and survive but our actions have probably signed the death warrant of countless other species. So I'd like to consume less, pollute less and choose better so that I can live in a clean, diverse and interesting world. (I'm not trying to accuse you at all Roger, I think you are a deeply empathic individual and probably understand the above better than I do. But my dad makes the same arguments as you do and I think it misses the point. Man needs to change and climate change is as good a driver as any I can think of. The suffering of the poor and hungry hasn't worked to make us better, maybe something that is on our marble doorsteps and not on another continent will.) :) I feel better now. My emo karma must be going upward...
cheers, Paul M. Watson.