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originally posted by: BlueJacket
a reply to: v1rtu0s0
Bill Gates is a fair candidate for Anti-Christ. I mean he fits a number of criteria, you know like: downright evil toad?
CDC Warns of Potential Fall Outbreak of Rare Polio-Like Illness in Children
The rare condition called acute flaccid myelitis, which causes limb weakness that can progress quickly into paralysis, has spiked in even-numbered years and peaked in 2018.
Yes, but then it goes on to say this:
originally posted by: TWS1969
a reply to: infolurker
A vaccinated person has little to worry about, and the U.S. has vaccine coverage of over 90 percent. Many had to receive the jabs to go to primary school. Inoculation lasts for life and there is no booster required for a person to stay safe from the virus.
Now THAT is how a vaccine should work!
A person who is already vaccinated is not believed to be at any risk.
originally posted by: BlueJacket
a reply to: v1rtu0s0
Bill Gates is a fair candidate for Anti-Christ. I mean he fits a number of criteria, you know like: downright evil toad?
originally posted by: BlueJacket
a reply to: v1rtu0s0
Bill Gates is a fair candidate for Anti-Christ. I mean he fits a number of criteria; you know like: downright evil toad?
originally posted by: marg6043
a reply to: infolurker
I will love to hear somebody defending how the nation is now down the crapper in just two years.
originally posted by: v1rtu0s0
originally posted by: TWS1969
a reply to: infolurker
A vaccinated person has little to worry about, and the U.S. has vaccine coverage of over 90 percent. Many had to receive the jabs to go to primary school. Inoculation lasts for life and there is no booster required for a person to stay safe from the virus.
Now THAT is how a vaccine should work!
Impossible, a vaccine is something that gives you "protection" for 2-6 weeks even though it seems like it doesn't do sh#.
makes it clear that because immunocompromised patients are mounting a weaker defense, each organ system is less able to constrain a mutant swarm to only produce the type of variant best suited for it – resulting in immunocompromised patients presenting as representative kaleidoscopes of the extant variants in a population. Curiously, the persistence of OPV live-vaccine strains in immunocompromised patients is also well-documented, where they produce the same kaleidoscope of variants and can use the same Terminator-like effect to reassemble themselves into a V-1000 form, what are called highly-diverged immunodeficient vaccine-derived polio viruses (iVDPVs).
And in crowded institutional settings like orphanages, these vaccine-derived V-1000 viruses are beginning to present the troubling problem of blocking the efficacy of existing vaccinations and innate immunity across the entire population. The emergence of these extraordinarily immune-evasive VDPVs are a stark reminder that a LAV going-wrong is just about the worst-case scenario as far as genetic experimentation goes. And strangely, the actual virus used for the production of the first the LAV which was attenuated to combat smallpox, has been lost to history.
LAVs were discovered by Louis Pasteur of preserving dairy-products fame, who accidentally discovered that samples of chicken cholera left out in the elements got weakened to the point where they effectively became vaccines: Exposing healthy chickens to samples of cholera that’d been weakened, or attenuated by the elements, protected the chickens from infection by the full-strength virus without creating any symptoms during inoculation by the weakened strain. And although this version of a LAV wasn’t known to revert, the modern LAV that protects against Polio, called OPV, can and does revert all the way back to full virulence and cause paralysis in its hosts.
This enigmatic process, of a LAV reverting or deattenuating back to virulence, is one of the worst nightmares for the virological and vaccinological communities - in part because in the case of OPV, the fully reverted strains are able to infect absolutely everyone, even if they’ve been fully vaccinated or previously infected. And its a possibility virologists and vaccine-designers are all well-aware of.
Because when a LAV reverts, the viral swarm that emerges in the case of OPV at least runs right through both natural and vaccine-induced immunity, and this is even with a virus like Polio where the OPV vaccine is considered 100% effective and permanent.
originally posted by: network dude
a reply to: infolurker
wasn't Polio vaccine an oral one, red juice in a little tube?
originally posted by: marg6043
a reply to: infolurker
I will love to hear somebody defending how the nation is now down the crapper in just two years.
originally posted by: marg6043
a reply to: nugget1
Nope, smallpox stop been use before the 80s, then Polio is no longer given to children since the 2000.
This what happen when vaccinations with real vaccines are stop.
There are two types of polio vaccine: the oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV) and the inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV), although only the latter is still used in the United States.
In the U.S., the use of the OPV vaccine was stopped in 2000, although it is still used in many parts of the world.
The OPV vaccine contains live polio virus, albeit in a weakened form, and is highly effective at protecting against the disease. In fact, OPV tends to be more effective than IPV at mitigating the spread of the disease between people.
However, in extremely rare cases, the weakened virus in the OPV vaccine has mutated into a form capable of causing disease. As a result, U.S. health authorities switched to only using the IPV vaccine in 2000, which contains an inactivated form of the poliovirus and, thus, cannot cause disease.
The IPV vaccine, which is the only one used in the U.S., provides around 90 percent immunity against all three types of poliovirus after two doses, and at least 99 percent immunity after three doses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
While there is no federal law that requires people to get this vaccine, which is given by a shot in the arm or leg depending on the person's age, all 50 states and the District of Columbia have state laws requiring children who are entering childcare or public schools to have this vaccination.
The CDC recommends that all children get four doses of IPV: one at two months old, one at four months old, one at six through 18 months old, and a final shot at four through six years old.
originally posted by: TWS1969
originally posted by: nugget1
Polio is a virus and viruses mutate. It was only a matter of time before polio figured out a way around the vaccine.
We have antibiotic resistant bacteria and we will see more viral diseases mutate to infect the vaccinated.
I remember not too many years ago when measles swept through a college campus back east somewhere, and all but a few had been vaccinated. Now the CDC is calling for even more boosters for the fully vaccinated, but just like bacteria viruses will find a way to soldier on.
It would be rather odd timing for Polio to mutate all on it's own just about now wouldn't it?