Saying No to Vaccines; A Resource Guide for All Ages

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Do you believe: • Vaccines are responsible for the eradication of diseases, such as polio and smallpox. • Vaccines have been proven to be safe for the individual. • When a vaccine is called “effective,” it’s the same as being “protective.” • Vaccines are “relatively harmless" If you said "yes" to any of these and would like more informaion to confront that answer, read on. The author has this to say: • I oppose the one-size-fits-all public health policy imposed by state rules and enforced by physicians and public health employees. • I oppose a system that forces parents to make decisions based on fear. A physician who forces a parent to vaccinate by using threats, such as reporting the parent to Children’s Services for medical neglect or threatening to discharge a family from the medical practice for not vaccinating, is not the physician you want to care for your family. I am opposed to those behaviors. • I oppose public health policy that demands the rights of the individual must become secondary to injecting a product that can have deadly consequences. Public health officials credit vaccination alone for low infection rates and use persuasion and coercion to enforce vaccination policy. • I support the freedom to refuse any medical procedure, including the right to refuse a vaccination. Once a person understands the real risks of vaccine-preventable infections and the real risks of vaccines designed to prevent them, I support the person’s right to make a choice regarding which risk they are willing to accept. • I am in favor of fully informed consent, which means giving a person the full range of pros and cons about a medical option and then allowing the option to refuse. • I am pro-information. Most information distributed to the general public by government organizations about the benefits of vaccination is incomplete at best and, at worst, deceptive. However, those that challenge the official stance about vaccination are marginalized as “anti-vaccine eccentrics” or “conspiracy theorists.” The premises behind vaccination need to be challenged. A debate cannot occur if questioning is not allowed. • I believe that vaccines can cause more harm to the health of the individual—and subsequently to the community as a whole—than the good claimed by doctors and public health officials. I am determined to share the information I have discovered because I have witnessed firsthand the destruction vaccines can cause children and their families. I have seen the pain in the eyes of parents, desperate to get their baby back to the way he was the day before be received multiple vaccines. I have cried with broken-hearted parents who wished they had taken time to investigate the risks of vaccines before they were forced to make an on-the-spot decision about vaccinating. With a little more information, they would have chosen differently.

Author(s): Sherri Tenpenny
Year: 2008

Language: English
Commentary: no index
Pages: 340
Tags: Medicine, pandemic, epidemic, politics, corruption, vaccination, vaccine ingredients, Immunization, CDC, Health Activism, Germ Theory, Disease, Infectious diseases, depopulation, mercury poisoning, mystery diseases, vaccines, symptoms, methylmercury, neurological damage, Covid-19, corona virus, plandemic, death rate, symptoms, red pill, wwg1wga

Copyright © 2008
Disclaimer
A Note to Readers
Acknowledgments
DEDICATION
Special Dedication
TABLE OF CONTENTS
FOREWORD
Foreword by Dr. Russell L. Blaylock, MD
1 Decisions About Vaccination Whom Should You Trust?
Immunization: Reality Behind the Myth
Ten Reasons to Say “No"
2 A (Short) History of Mandatory Vaccination
3 Refuting the 25 Most Common Arguments Supporting Vaccination
1. Vaccines are safe.
2. Vaccines are effective and save millions of lives per year around the world.
3. Serious adverse events following vaccination are rare
4. Vaccination has been demonstrated to be one of the most effective medical interventions known to mankind. The eradication of smallpox demonstrates this accomplishment♦
5. Vaccine-induced antibodies provide protection against infection, disability and death caused by vaccine-preventable diseases. Antibodies are a sign of protection*
6. Arguments against vaccination are irrational
7. Vaccine-preventable diseases of childhood can be serious. If your child is not vaccinated, they could contract one of these illnesses and die.
8, Parents who believe chickenpox is a benign disease and that the vaccine is not necessary are putting their children at considerable risk.
FACTS ABOUT CHICKENPOX AND THE CHICKENPOX VACCINE:
9. No child should be denied the benefits of vaccination.
10. Vaccination is one of the most cost-effective interventions in all of health care.
11. There is no evidence that vaccination harms the immune system.
12. There is no evidence that vaccination can lead to chronic disease.
13. There is no evidence that vaccination is linked with the development of asthma.
14. There is no evidence that vaccination can lead to allergies.
15. The traces of additives found in vaccines are inconsequential and non-toxic*.
16. The stray viruses sometimes found in vaccines are harmless.
17. Vaccines cannot cause the diseases they are designed to prevent.
18. We must continue to vaccinate against polio until the WHO declares the virus is eradicated. After all, polio is just a plane ride away.
19. Everyone must be vaccinated to protect everyone else.
20. Pertussis (whooping cough) is serious and children are at risk of dying from this infection.
21. The pertussis vaccine is safe. After all, it has been FDA-approved for use since the 1940s.
22. Due to concerns about the whole-cell pertussis vaccine, a new, acellular pertussis vaccine was licensed in 1991. The DTaP vaccine is safe and effective.
24. The incidence of pertussis is on the rise. Adolescents need to be revaccinated to prevent outbreaks of pertussis.
25. There is no relationship between the MMR vaccine and autism.
4 Vaccine Exemptions:
How to Legally Avoid Vaccinations*
Types of Exemptions
Philosophical Exemptions
Religious Exemptions
Medical Exemptions
Proof of Immunity Exemption
Care of Your Exemption Papers
5 VACCINE EXEMPTIONS FOR SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES*
Question: Is there an exemption for the annual TB test for healthcare workers?
Question: Is there an exemption for the annual flu shot for those who work in hospitals?
Question: Is there an exemption for the annual flu shot for those who work in a nursing home?
Question: Who is at risk of contracting hepatitis A? Is the vaccine necessary?
II. Vaccine Exemptions and Divorce
Question: Is there a way to ensure that my spouse and I will not have a disagreement over vaccines—especially if we divorce?
Question: I am getting divorced. My spouse and I disagree over the need for vaccines for our children. How do I avoid court-ordered vaccines during divorce proceedings?
III. Other Special Circumstances:
Question: Can exemptions used for primary school be used as exemptions for college?
Question: What vaccine exemptions are available for daycare or for private schools?
Question: Is there an exemption for the annual flu and pneumonia shot for nursing home residents?
Question: Does the law provide for exemptions for those in correctional centers?
Question: Does the law provide for exemptions for developmentally disabled residents?
Question: I am required to travel overseas for my job. Do I have rights to refuse travel vaccinations that are suggested / recommended / required by my employer?
Question: There are many recommended travel vaccines. Are these required or can I avoid them?
Question: Are vaccine exemptions available for foreign adults who want to immigrate to the U.S.?
Question: Are there exemptions for children who are being adopted?
Question: Are there exemptions for children being adopted from outside the country?
Question: Are there vaccination exemptions for persons in the military?
Question: What is the military punishment for refusing the anthrax vaccine?
Question: Are there vaccination exemptions for military assessions?
Question: Are there vaccination exemptions for civilian employees, military contract workers and their family members?
Question: Are there vaccination exemptions for military
school teachers and daycare workers?
Question: Are there vaccination exemptions for military children and other family members of military personnel?
6 FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT VACCINATIONS
7 Selected Articles by Dr Tenpenny
The Importance of Fever
A Brief Overview of The Flu: Past and Present
Flu Shots: They Don’t Work
Flu Shots: The Manipulation of Annual Campaigns
Flu Shots: Beware of Toxic Additives
MINIMIZING FOOD-BORNE RISKS:
PROTECT AGAINST MOSQUITO RISKS:
Vaccinations and Overseas Travel
8 GLOSSARY
Addendum A-Childhood
Addendum B-Adolescent
Addendum C-by State
Addendum D-EU
Addendum E-Prices
Addendum F-Ingredients
Addendum G-by Vaccine
Addendum I-Decline Graphs
Addendum J-References
Addendum K-OSHA
Addendum L-Adoption
Addendum M-Philosophical Exemption
Addendum N-Refusal
Addendum O-Injury Act
Addendum P-Titer Table
Addendum Q-Hosp Empl
Addendum R-College
Addendum S-Parent Support
Recommended Books
Addendum T-Pre-Vaccine
Addendum U-Quick Refs
Back Cover