by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
The Disneyland measles outbreak has America in a panic — a fact that’s totally out of proportion to reality given that so far only 644 people have even caught the measles across the country during the entire year of 2014 vs. the 100,000+ Americans who die every year from the side effects of prescription medications. (The Disneyland outbreak, at least count, was just 39 people.)
Nevertheless, lots of parents are asking the question, “Should I get my children vaccinated against the measles?” I’m going to try to give you the most rational answer here regardless of whether you’re pro-vaccine or opposed to vaccines on principle. But first, realize that the one-dimensional advice from the conventional media and health authorities is stupidly incomplete: “Everybody get vaccinated!”
Can measles vaccines work to protect against measles? Absolutely they can in some people, but they are not without their own risks as you’ll see below. Despite the way I have been deliberately mis-characterized by others, I am not opposed to the theory of immunization. In fact, I’m the author of “A Blueprint for Safer Vaccines” which argues for the creation of clean vaccines formulated without toxic ingredients used today such as mercury, MSG, aluminum and formaldehyde, all of which the CDC openly admits are still used in vaccines today.