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SoTW - Translated from Norwegian to English with crappy Google Translator |
by Hans Gaarder 02. 03. 2014 13.2K views 3 minutes reading time
Vaccines themselves do not provide protection against disease. Only a well-functioning immune system can provide protection against disease. A well-functioning immune system also provides the best ability to fight disease. For vaccines to work as intended, they requirea well-functioning immune system. Vaccines have an immunosuppressive effect.
Immunology and vaccinesThe condition of a child's blood during the first two years of life determines the quality of the immune system that will last a lifetime. The immune system can only develop to its full potential if it remains intact. It is therefore important that the bloodstream of young children is kept free of foreign elements, especially during the first two years. Injection of vaccines involves the introduction of foreign elements into the bloodstream. A consequence of this is that vaccines should be avoided in babies and young children.
Ingredients in vaccines
Vaccines do not only contain the viruses to be vaccinated against (which are given in diluted doses).
Vaccines also contain:
– attenuated organisms
– toxoids (waste products from attenuated organisms)
– formaldehyde
– ethylene glycol (antifreeze)
– aluminum (can cause imbalances in the nervous system)
– Mercury is used in certain vaccines, including the swine flu vaccine Pandemrix.
– Polysorbate 80
Mercury in vaccines can cause autism and ME (chronic fatigue syndrome). The fact that many Norwegian young people got ME after the Norwegian Institute of Public Health's trials with meningococcal vaccine [and dummy vaccine/placebo] in the 1980s and 1990s was due to the element mercury, which was found in both the vaccine and the placebo vaccine. There are several similarities between autism and ME, including instability in the intestinal system.
About autism and vaccines