On 03/06/2015 01:31 PM, salyavin808 wrote:
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <noozguru@...> wrote :
On 03/06/2015 01:10 PM, salyavin808 wrote:
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>, <noozguru@...>
<mailto:noozguru@...> wrote :
OTOH, I wouldn't be surprised that people who have been observing
healthful practices for years, not eating bad food with chemicals
and preservatives might have severe reactions to vaccines which
contain a lot of crap in them. You spend years raising your kids
to be healthy and then you're going to abandon those principles
to help big pharma make money with "junk" vaccines?
Prove it. And in the mean time consider the effect of return of
the vicious and highly contageous illnesses we've all but
banished because a few health freaks are worried about
"poisoning" their children's bodies. It won't be pretty for the
parents of the children at the Marshy school when some of them
get ill but they'll only have themselves to blame. Or karma.
People who have been watching their health usually have strong
immune systems.
So the Marshy school kids are going to be immune and show the way
for the rest of us? I think I hear nature laughing as the viruses
mutate....
And as they mutate big pharma can't even keep up with them. So the
vaccines won't help anyway.
It's funny how many times people's hubris has led them to think
they're going to beat nature at what she does best - slaughter -
and simply by virtue of diet and prayer! Good luck to them I say.
Do you get flu shots? I don't and I don't get flu nor even a cold. Most
people I know who get flu shots come down with the flu. So those don't
work and again they don't have the current strains in those shots anyway.
Bet you scream about mercury in ayurvedic products but think that the
mercury in vaccines are okay.
And you need to understand that the vaccine being pushed is not
the same one that was given children way back in the late 1960s.
That one was fairly safe. Did you read the PDF for the insert? I
posted the link to it here. I'm guessing biochemistry is NOT one
of your science interests.
Now I'll let you get back to your mushy peas and chips. :-D
What pisses me off is that any immunity I've got from vaccines or
childhood exposure is long gone so I can get really ill again
too. Thanks a lot yummy mummies!
Religion's aim has always been to keep us in the dark ages. It
might yet succeed.
On 03/06/2015 12:09 PM, salyavin808 wrote:
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>, <mjackson74@...>
<mailto:mjackson74@...> wrote :
A few schools have large pools of unvaccinated kids
<http://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2015/02/28/maharishi-school-fairfield-vaccinations/24193179/>
A few schools have large pools of unvaccinated kids
<http://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2015/02/28/maharishi-school-fairfield-vaccinations/24193179/>
Maharishi School in Fairfield is only one where less than half
of students are vaccinated.
View on www.desmoinesregi...
<http://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/iowa-poll/2015/02/28/maharishi-school-fairfield-vaccinations/24193179/>
Preview by Yahoo
Good points made by the reporter - like how can u have a
religious exemption when TM is not a religion!!
Those who choose to ignore the mistakes of the past are doomed
to repeat them.
I liked this bit:
Movement members say it is not a religion, but stresses
"natural" methods of staying well. Followers are urged to eat
nutritious foods, exercise regularly, meditate and take other
steps to maintain their health.
Yes, I can really see the world's viruses respecting their
healthy lifestyle and twice daily practise of meditation. Still,
there's always the yagya programme as a last resort.
Then there's the triumph of irrational thinking over common sense:
Leila Montgomery is one of the Maharishi school parents who
obtained a religious exemption to avoid vaccinations.
Montgomery's 9-year-old son, Dil, is a third-grader at the
school, and her 18-month-old daughter, Lyra, will soon start
preschool there.
Montgomery said her application for the exemption wasn't based
on an organized religion's teachings, but it was sincere. She
defines her religious belief as "my ability to listen to my
inner intuition."She added: "I believe science is not my God."
Montgomery said her children never get sick, and she credits
good nutrition, exercise and other healthy habits. She doubts
vaccines are as effective as promoters claim. She said she's not
overly worried about her kids contracting diseases such as measles.
"I don't live my life in fear,"she said.
Maybe not, but she'll live her life in sorrow if her kids die of
measles. I almost hope these deluded idiots get what they're
asking for but a lot of other people will get ill when diseases
like measles come back.
It's an astonishing yet true fact, you may not be ill now but
you may get ill in the future. Maybe this woman is so
brainwashed by her lack of real world experience she actually
thinks her children's current good health is an indication of
their future good health? I wish her luck...
I also blame the prevailing stupidity of the TMO and it's
"prevention is better than cure" meme that puts having a
perfectly balanced pulse ahead of anything else when it comes to
health management. Oh, and eating seasonal organic vegetables.
That's a big plus in the fight against contagious diseases
obviously [eye roll].
PS I think that "I believe science is not my God" is the dumbest
statement I've ever encountered..