Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Vaccination Ingredients

• Phenol (poison)
• Formaldehyde (cancer causing)
• Alum (preservative)
• Acetone (nail polish remover)
• Aluminum Phosphate (toxic, deodorants)
• Glycerin (toxic liver, kidney, lung damage)
• Monosodium Glutamate (MSG allergic)
• Toxic Metals, lead, cadmium, aluminum and mercury (thimerosal)
• Fecal matter, dog kidney, monkey kidney
• Horse serum, pig blood, horse blood
• Calf serum, rabbit brain
• Yeast proteins
• Antibiotics
• RNA and DNA from growth medium including retro viruses from animals
• SV 40 cancer causing from monkeys

Vaccine Production

• Virus is gathered from sick infected person or animal…urine, blood, feces, pus
• Must be grown on a toxic medium: decomposing animal organs such as baby hamster kidneys, monkey kidneys, aborted fetal lung tissue (rubella vaccine called RA27/3)
• Once grown, virus is inactivated with formaldehyde or other agents
• All substances are unnatural, synthetic, immune suppressing and/or carcinogenic

Vaccine Facts:

• The amount of vaccines has increased from 3 in 1950 to: 23 doses of 13 diseases by 2002
• 74 injected bacterial/viral components for 15 diseases by age of 6 in 2004

Parents Know Your Rights:

• Every state has exemptions available to them (religious, philosophical and medical exemptions)
• If you do not know your rights, you cannot exercise them!
• Complete list of state exemptions available at National Vaccine Information Center

References:

1) Are vaccines safe? By Mary Tocco. For updated information and to schedule Mary Tocco to speak at your next event, please visit: www.childhoodshots.com or call her at (231) 642-7984

2) National Vaccine Information Center www.nvic.org

I am a Chiropractor

As long as I have these 2 hands, I will use them!

D.D.’s Trial: In the early part of 1906 D.D. and B.J. were indicted by the Grand Jury of Scott County, Davenport, for practicing medicine without a license. D.D.’s trial was first. The courtroom was crowded during the trial. The jury entered the room and the judge asked the foreman of the jury if they had reached a decision.

“We have your Honor”, the foreman answered. The judge nodded and the foreman continued. “We, the jury find the defendant, Daniel David Palmer, guilty as charged.” The court buzzed and the judge again rapped his gavel. “Has the defendant anything to say in his behalf?”

“May I be allowed to address the court?” D.D. asked. The judge consented. D.D. walked slowly to where the jury sat and looked at each person slowly. Many of them lowered their eyes. “You may have judged me, gentlemen, having in mind some of my actions that have taken place while I lived in Davenport for the past 30 years. This would not be fair, as you were told I was being tried for practicing medicine without license. I cannot change your verdict, but I would like it known to you and all who sit in this courtroom, that the only thing I have done wrong was in getting sick people well where medicine failed. If sick people had been able to get well under medicine, they would not have tried the method which I have discovered. If they had not gotten well under my care, these same people would not have to come back.

“I am not guilty,” he shouted, making people in court jump. “Medicine is guilty…for not getting these sick people well.”

“Our ancestors came to this country and fought for freedom.” He continued in a soft, passionate voice. “I believe freedom also constitutes a patient having his choice in a doctor and to select the type of healing his intelligence finds best to regain his health. Because medicine has failed in these cases, do these pool souls have to spend the rest of their lives suffering?”

D.D. raised both his hands, fingers outstretched, palms towards the jury. With a look on his face of strong conviction, his long hair hanging loosely, Dan said, “As long as I have these two hands and there are sick people to get well, I will use them.”