What do the 19 countries Albania, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Cape Verde, Egypt, Iran, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Mauritius, Papua New Guinea, the Phillipines, Sao Tome, St. Vincent, Tajikistan, Thailand, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan have in common?
These are the countries which have been targeted by the World Health Organization for mass innoculation of the polio vaccine. The rationale is that they are also the countries which have had the world's highest rates of polio, because they didn't participate in the earlier mass innoculations of these vaccines during the "polio epidemic" years of the 1950s.
But how widespread is polio in these countries, and what is the long term effect of the polio vaccines?
Their average rate of polio is 0.077 cases per 100,000 population, which is not very many cases of polio. It is less than a total of 250 cases--hardly sufficient justification for the mass innoculation of children with vaccines which have the potential to contain monkey viruses with unknown long term consequences.
Besides being the countries which were late in taking the polio vaccinations, all of these countries also have another thing in common--they have extremely low cancer mortality rates. Men in Thailand have a cancer rate of 6.4 per 100,000 population, which is one thirty fifth of the cancer rate for American men of 221.3.
The average rate of cancer for men in these 19 countries is 43.9, and 37.3 for women, which is one fifth of the rate for Americans. If the cancer mortality rate in the US had been equivalent to their average rate, there would have been 107,907 cancer deaths in the US in 1996 rather than 539,533--431,626 fewer deaths.
Soft Kill Weapon? Slow Motion Holocaust? Eugenics In Action?
What's it going to take for Plantation Negros To Realize Sucking On Monkey Virus Brought To You By The Same People Who Put 80% of Planned Parenthood's Abortion Clinics In Minority Areas, Might Not Be A Good Thing?
Thursday, June 04, 2009
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2 comments:
who is really behind it denmark vesey?
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