"Pediatricians continue
to defend vaccination to the death. The question parents
should be asking is, 'Whose death?'" Robert
Mendelsohn, MD
"All vaccination has the effect
of directing the three values of the blood into or toward
the zone characteristics of cancer and leukemia...Vaccines
do predispose to cancer and leukemia." Professor
L. Vincent - founder of Bioelectronics - Doctors Against
Vaccines
I read an article that Dr. Thomas J. Slaga, Ph.D. wrote,
about the causes of cancer which named the top cancer-causing
elements in our society. Here they are:
tobacco
alcohol
poor diet
pollution
heredity
"In fact, 80% of all cancers are linked to tobacco use,
dietary factors, exposure to sun and ionizing radiation, as
well as to exposure to chemicals and pollutants in our workplace
and environment."
Vaccinations didn't make the list.
Well, at least he recommends detoxification, and mentions a
dietary supplement, d-glucarate,
and how it contributes in the fight against cancer. Another
detoxification product we've been using is the mineral zeolites,
scientifically proven to be effective with chemotherapy treatments
and chelating the vaccine poisons out of the body completely.
CLL (Chronic Lymphoblastic (Lymphocytic) Leukemia) results
from an acquired injury to the DNA of a single cell, a lymphocyte,
in the bone marrow. This
injury is not present at birth. Scientists do not
yet understand what produces this change in the DNA of CLL patients.
Evidently these are government-paid or pharmaceutical industry
scientists.
They do not yet understand what could
possibly produce changes in a person's DNA.
"Here, let me shoot this serum into your 6
month old baby -- it's safe, it's ok, ma'am, it's made from
other species. Yep, animal parts. Yes. Cultured on monkey
kidneys and the like. With thimerisol added, and maybe a bit
of formaldehyde to keep it preserved. And aspartame belongs
in any good vaccine. Oh, and MSG of course."
What? Sounds doubtful, you say? Or just gross? How
about rabbit brain? Now you have to admit that rabbit
brain would have a place in a vaccine, along with horse blood.
Vaccine
Ingredients - Formaldehyde, Aspartame, Mercury
The numbers of microbes, antibiotics, chemicals, heavy metals
and animal byproducts is staggering. Would you knowingly inject
these materials into your children?
"In August of 1978, one of my teachers, a GP of over 40
years' experience, invited me to see one of his patients, a
5-year-old boy with chronic
lymphocytic leukemia, which had first appeared soon after
a DPT vaccination. Though he had treated the child successfully
with homeopathic remedies on two previous occasions, with shrinkage
of the liver and spleen back almost to normal size and a dramatic
improvement in the blood picture, full relapse had occurred
both times within a week or two of each successive booster.
That vaccines might somehow be implicated in childhood leukemia
was an idea shocking enough in itself, but it also completed
the line of reasoning opened up by the previous cases. For leukemia
is precisely a cancerous process of the blood and blood-forming
organs (liver, spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow), which are
also the principal sites of the immune system. Insofar as the
vaccines are able to produce serious effects at all, the blood
and the major immune organs are certainly the logical place
to begin looking for them. But perhaps even more shocking to
me was the fact that the boy's own parents were so reluctant
to make the connection, even when it was staring them in the
face and literally threatening their son's life. It was this
case that convinced me once and for all of the need for serious
discussion of vaccine-related illness, since rigorous experimental
proof of these matters will require years of painstaking investigation
and a high level of public commitment to back it up that so
far has not been made."
The disease is often referred to as acute lymphoblastic leukemia
because the leukemic cell that replaces the normal marrow is
the (leukemic) lymphoblast. The effects are:
1) the uncontrolled and exaggerated growth and accumulation
of cells called
"lymphoblasts" or "leukemic blasts " which
fail to function as normal blood
cells and
2) the blockade of the production of normal marrow cells, leading
to a
deficiency of red cells (anemia), platelets (thrombocytopenia),
and normal
white cells (especially neutrophils, i.e., neutropenia) in the
blood.
You might see the following symtoms:
* Shortness of Breath
* Fatigue (Feeling Sleepy or Tired)
* Bruise easily
* Cuts heal very slowly or you bleed easily
* Repeated infections
* Joint Pain
* Mild fevers
General Information About Childhood Acute Myeloid Leukemia and
Other Myeloid Malignancies
Key Points for This Section
* Childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a type of cancer
in which the bone marrow makes a large number of abnormal blood
cells.
* There are different subtypes of childhood AML.
* Myelodysplastic syndromes are caused by changes in the blood-forming
cells of the bone marrow. They are not a type of leukemia.
* Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is a type of cancer
in which the bone marrow makes too many white blood cells.
* Exposure to radiation and a history of myelodysplastic syndrome
or aplastic anemia may affect the risk of developing childhood
AML.
* Possible signs of childhood AML, myelodysplastic syndromes,
or JMML include fever, feeling tired, and easy bleeding or bruising.
* Tests that examine the blood and bone marrow are used to detect
(find) and diagnose childhood AML, myelodysplastic syndromes,
or JMML.
* Certain factors affect prognosis (chance of recovery) and
treatment options.
Childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a type of cancer
in which the bone marrow makes a large number of abnormal blood
cells.
Childhood acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a cancer of the blood
and bone marrow. This type of cancer usually gets worse quickly
if it is not treated. AML is also called acute myelogenous leukemia,
acute myeloblastic leukemia, acute granulocytic leukemia, or
acute nonlymphocytic leukemia.
Other diseases that affect the blood and bone marrow are myelodysplastic
syndromes and juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML).
Normally, the bone marrow produces stem cells (immature cells)
that develop into mature blood cells. There are three types
of mature blood cells:
* Red blood cells that carry oxygen and other materials to
all tissues of the body.
* White blood cells that fight infection and disease.
* Platelets that help prevent bleeding by causing blood clots
to form.
In AML, the stem cells usually develop into a type of white
blood cell called myeloblasts (or myeloid blasts). The myeloblasts,
or leukemia cells, in AML are abnormal and do not mature into
healthy white blood cells. Leukemia cells are unable to do their
usual work and can build up in the blood and bone marrow so
there is less room for healthy white blood cells, red blood
cells, and platelets. When this happens, infection, anemia,
or easy bleeding may occur. The leukemia cells can spread outside
the blood to other parts of the body, including the central
nervous system (brain and spinal cord), skin, and gums.
This summary is about childhood AML, myelodysplastic syndromes,
and JMML. Refer to the following PDQ summaries for more information
about other types of leukemia and diseases of the blood and
bone marrow:
The subtypes of AML are based on the type of blood cell that
is affected, how mature (developed) the cancer cells are at
the time of diagnosis, and how different they are from normal
cells. The treatment for most subtypes of AML is similar. One
subtype of AML, acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), is treated
differently from other types of AML.
Myelodysplastic syndromes are caused by changes in the blood-forming
cells of the bone marrow. They are not a type of leukemia.
In myelodysplastic syndromes, the bone marrow makes too few
red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. These blood
cells may not mature and enter the blood. The treatment for
myelodysplastic syndromes depends on how much lower than normal
the number of red blood cells, white blood cells, or platelets
is. Myelodysplastic syndromes may progress to AML.
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is a type of cancer
in which the bone marrow makes too many white blood cells.
Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is a rare childhood
cancer that occurs more often in children younger than 2 years.
In JMML, the bone marrow makes too many white blood cells. The
white blood cells are unable to do their usual work and can
build up in the blood and bone marrow so there is less room
for healthy white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets.
Exposure to radiation and a history of myelodysplastic syndrome
or aplastic anemia may affect the risk of developing childhood
AML.
Possible risk factors for AML include the following:
* Having a brother or sister, especially a twin, with leukemia.
* Being Hispanic.
* Being exposed to cigarette smoke or alcohol before birth.
* Having a history of myelodysplastic syndrome (also called
preleukemia) or aplastic anemia.
* Past treatment with chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
* Being exposed to ionizing radiation or chemicals such as benzene.
* Having certain genetic disorders, such as Down syndrome.
Possible risk factors for myelodysplastic syndromes include
the following:
* Past treatment with chemotherapy or radiation therapy.
* Being exposed to ionizing radiation or chemicals such as benzene.
* Having certain genetic disorders, such as Down syndrome or
Fanconi's anemia.
One possible risk factor for JMML is having certain genetic
disorders such as neurofibromatosis type 1 or Noonan's syndrome.
Possible signs of childhood AML, myelodysplastic syndromes,
or JMML include fever, feeling tired, and easy bleeding or bruising.
These and other symptoms may be caused by childhood AML, myelodysplastic
syndromes, JMML, or other conditions. A doctor should be consulted
if any of the following problems occur:
* Fever with or without an infection.
* Shortness of breath.
* Weakness or feeling tired.
* Easy bruising or bleeding.
* Petechiae (flat, pinpoint spots under the skin caused by bleeding).
* Pain in the bones or joints.
* Pain or feeling of fullness below the ribs.
* Painless lumps in the neck, underarm, stomach, groin, or other
parts of the body. When seen in childhood AML, these lumps,
called leukemia cutis, may be blue or purple.
* Painless lumps that are sometimes around the eyes. These lumps,
called chloromas, are sometimes seen in childhood AML and may
be blue-green.
Chloroma: a malignant, green-colored tumor of myeloid
cells (a type of immature white blood cell). This tumor is usually
associated with myelogenous leukemia. Also called granulocytic
sarcoma.
Leukemia: An acquired
(not inherited) genetic
injury to the DNA???
"I'm not a real religious person. But if
I was, I'd be agreeing with the title of a book I saw years
ago, 'Satan is Alive and Well and Living on Planet Earth.'
Living right in the pharmaceutical
industry. And government of course.
Probably oil too? LOTS of petroleum-based
products (and its "by-products") are in Big Pharma
products, many of which you consume internally, apply on your
skin, take intravenously... It's all good!"
What families in government are founded on oil,
and own large shares of pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly?