> Not true. Further, one of the adjuvents in the swine flu vaccine
> causes this exact crippling in animal lab tests.

Even *if* either of these statements is true (of course, you don't provide 
links to any actual scientific data to support it since there is none), there 
is NO WAY that any causal relationship can be made. One has to look for horses, 
not zebras. Is she the more-than-million-to-one person that actually caught flu 
from the vaccine and then the additional more-than-million-to-one chance of 
getting dystonia as well from the vaccine?? Extremely unlikely. Or is she 
someone that simply did not have an effective vaccine reaction (very common) or 
someone that caught something flu-like that was not a serovar that the vaccine 
protects against (very common - could have even been H1N1 she had, which the 
normal flu vaccine doesn't protect against) and as a result of secondary 
infections, had this result (it's highly debatable if it even is dystonia, but 
if so, we know can be a result from infection, but which no verified cases from 
flu vaccine exist). 

No medical professional would ever say vaccines are 100% safe. It's not 
possible to inject anything into someone without there being risk, and in fact, 
typically you will sign a release anytime you get one that you understand the 
risks. But this is *not* a case that can be linked in any reasonable way to a 
vaccine reaction. It's just being sensationalized because it's far easier to 
plaster video up of someone with a motor function problem than the more typical 
types of vaccine reaction.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Want to reach the ColdFusion community with something they want? Let them know 
on the House of Fusion mailing lists
Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:306999
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5

Reply via email to