Dallas County, Texas has reported its first 2025 case of measles in a woman who was fully vaccinated, raising questions about the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine’s purported efficacy.
The MMR vaccine contains a live virus that can infect the vaccinated and can be shed from the vaccinated to the unvaccinated (see below).
Officials with the Dallas County Health and Human Services (DCHHS) said on Thursday the resident is “a woman in her mid-20s who was fully vaccinated,” CBS News reported.
The woman was said to be contagious from May 30 through June 7.
“We are actively investigating this case and working to identify any individuals who may have been exposed,” Health Director Dr. Philip Huang said in a news release.
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Measles Vaccine Contains Live Virus, Can Infect Vaccinated Individuals & Spread to the Unvaccinated
JonFleetwood.com is exclusively keeping a growing list of recent troubling patterns linking measles infections to recent government-led MMR vaccination campaigns across North America:
The MMR vaccine contains a live measles virus, according to the manufacturer.
The live measles virus in the MMR vaccine is the product of gain-of-function (GOF) laboratory experiments, meaning it is deliberately engineered to enhance its ability to infect more human cells than the wild-type measles virus is able to, and may retain characteristics that enable transmission and replication in the vaccinated and unvaccinated alike.
The live virus in the vaccine can be shed for weeks from the vaccinated, potentially infecting the unvaccinated. A 1995 CDC study found that 83% of vaccinated children had measles virus shed in their urine. An April 2012 publication in the peer-reviewed journal Paediatrics & Child Health reported a child was being investigated after developing a new-onset measles-type rash after receiving a measles vaccine, meaning the shot can cause disease in the vaccinated. Nucleic acid testing confirmed that a “vaccine-type measles virus was being shed in the [child’s] urine.” A 2014 study in Clinical Infectious Diseases confirms that vaccinated individuals can transmit measles to multiple contacts.
There are no peer-reviewed studies that confirm the virus in the measles vaccine is less infectious or replicates less in humans than the wild-type virus found in nature, meaning health officials have no scientific basis for claiming the vaccine strain poses a lower transmission risk to the unvaccinated.
The claim that many of these measles cases are from wild-type measles viruses and not the live virus in the vaccine is undermined by the fact that the PCR test used as evidence of wild-type infection is only reliable less than 3% of the time. Research in Access Microbiology highlights that standard PCR assays might not effectively distinguish between vaccine and wild-type strains. The CDC has confirmed that PCR tests often misinterpret measles vaccine virus infection as wild-type measles infection: “Inability of these testing panels to differentiate between measles virus causing illness and incidental detection of measles vaccine virus RNA can have significant public health reporting and response ramifications, potentially leading to misdiagnosis of measles virus infection,” writes CDC.
Measles outbreaks have followed government-led vaccination campaigns in Texas, Canada, and Hawaii, raising concerns of vaccine-caused infections.
A 12-month-old girl in Michigan recently infected with measles had received an MMR vaccine.
Southern New Mexico’s most populous and vaccinated county, Doña Ana, recently reported its first measles infection after the state nearly doubled its measles vaccination rate compared to last year.
Virginia’s first confirmed measles case in 2025 occurred in a child following state and local health officials issuing multiple public health announcements urging residents to get the MMR shot.
Just weeks after the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) rolled out a “measles simulator dashboard” meant to pressure students and residents into receiving MMR vaccines, Illinois reported its first confirmed measles case of 2025.
The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment recently confirmed a fifth case of measles in Colorado this year in a Denver County adult resident with verified measles (MMR) vaccination records.
In May 2025, Texas and New Mexico had the sharpest increase in measles vaccination—they also had the most measles cases.
The Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) reported a confirmed case of measles in central Iowa in an adult following a state-led MMR vaccination campaign, raising questions as to whether the efforts to boost vaccination rates led to the infection.
With outbreaks repeatedly emerging in the wake of mass vaccination drives—and now in the vaccinated themselves—health officials may be fueling the very disease they claim to prevent.
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"working to identify any individuals who may have been exposed"
WTF? Everyone got measles when I was a kid, and no one died. It wasn't serious, and still isn't.
Pure fear-mongering for the profits of vaxx-merchants.
Population control..it has been the plan all along!