| Format | Paperback |
|---|
The Potential Vaccination Delusion
$20.86 Save:$7.00(24%)
Available in stock
| Reading age: | 10 - 18 years |
|---|---|
| Print length: | 177 pages |
| Language: | English |
| Dimensions: | 15.24 x 1.02 x 22.86 cm |
| Publication date: | 23 April 2024 |
| ISBN-13: | 979-8323739806 |
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Description
This book is about what humanity has done to test the efficacy of vaccinations in lowering disease. It has collated startling facts pertaining to the persistent experiments and debates regarding vaccinations—facts that are sure to give anyone pause. Some of these findings have only recently arrived on the internet (for example, ‘Resistor’s logic: The anti-vaccination arguments of Alfred Russel Wallace and their role in the debates over compulsory vaccination in England, 1870–1907’ published in the peer-reviewed journal Studies in History and Philosophy of Biomedical and Biological Sciences). Humanity, it seems, has some facing up to itself to do. Take, for example, the fact that neither Lewis nor any of the ‘marshals’ on YouTube who suspect Lewis of medical misinformation (and who concede he in fact isn’t misinforming) are able to find one properly controlled (using saline or no placebo-injections) experiment where a vaccination lowered an iota of overall disease incidence, cellular damage, cellular stress, or mortality. Facts like this are beginning to emerge, and as time progresses, some facts are getting too big to ignore. Lewis also can’t find a single experiment that unassailably indicates that any disease can be transferred via microbe-specifically, and has shared what he has found in this book. Lewis has collated pertinent information from various sources to help the lay reader gain a sounder understanding of where we are now in terms of the vaccination debate and where we appear to be heading in our approach to understanding disease. A narration of the key points in the genesis and history of the vaccination campaign, and a look at some of the most championed controlled experiments involving vaccination, to see what unassailable indications we have produced regarding vaccination effectiveness in disease mitigation. A look at some of the most famous vaccinated-against disease characters, such as smallpox and polio, especially at the way in which their diagnostic criteria/protocols have changed over the years. The suggestion that we as a culture could be wrong about something scientific which most of us believe in, seems to be a severe blow to our morale, which Lewis is hyper-respectful of; the forms of mandatory vaccination and non-believer bullying manifesting, have pushed him to do this work. — ISBN13: 9798323739806
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