When virus particles are inside a person, in the blood, lymph, tissue cells, or the spaces between cells... that person is said to be infected. You can do that by taking virus particles, putting them in a syringe, and inject them with a needle. Infection by injection. Supposedly the injected infection is strong enough to cause an immune response, but not strong enough to cause symptoms. Good luck with that. I guess that's why the vaccine package insert with the measles vaccine says the child might experience a fever and a skin rash.
It will be interesting to see whether the CDC ever releases any information on viral types in these outbreaks, i.e. whether cases are wild or vaccine strain. During the Disneyland and other outbreaks in 2014, when they sampled cases in California they found that 37% of the cases had vaccine strain measles, meaning the vaccine was the cause of the measles case. Pro-industry friendlies try to pretend that these cases are somehow different, but the science says otherwise:
Rapid Identification of Measles Virus Vaccine Genotype by Real-Time PCR
"Since approximately 5% of recipients of measles virus-containing vaccine experience rash and fever which may be indistinguishable from measles (9), it is very important to identify vaccine reactions to avoid unnecessary isolation of the patient, as well as the need for contact tracing and other labor-intensive public health interventions."
"During the measles outbreak in California in 2015, a large number of suspected cases occurred in recent vaccines. Of the 194 measles virus sequences obtained in the United States in 2015, 73 were identified as vaccine sequences."
You might also be interested in the following:
Crying Wolf Over Measles Outbreaks : Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
Claims they are caused by vaccine hesitancy are inconsistent with CDC's own data.
When virus particles are inside a person, in the blood, lymph, tissue cells, or the spaces between cells... that person is said to be infected. You can do that by taking virus particles, putting them in a syringe, and inject them with a needle. Infection by injection. Supposedly the injected infection is strong enough to cause an immune response, but not strong enough to cause symptoms. Good luck with that. I guess that's why the vaccine package insert with the measles vaccine says the child might experience a fever and a skin rash.
They are protecting a narrative for a fraudulent industry.
Of course most people won't hear real news like this but I appreciate it anyway.
Thank you, Dr!
sorta reminds me of the COVID "vaccine"
all the ppl who claim to have had COVID like 4 or 5 times now were 'vaccinated'
would be laughable if their brainwashing wasn't so sad/frustrating/pathetic/etc.
It will be interesting to see whether the CDC ever releases any information on viral types in these outbreaks, i.e. whether cases are wild or vaccine strain. During the Disneyland and other outbreaks in 2014, when they sampled cases in California they found that 37% of the cases had vaccine strain measles, meaning the vaccine was the cause of the measles case. Pro-industry friendlies try to pretend that these cases are somehow different, but the science says otherwise:
Rapid Identification of Measles Virus Vaccine Genotype by Real-Time PCR
https://jcm.asm.org/content/55/3/735
"Since approximately 5% of recipients of measles virus-containing vaccine experience rash and fever which may be indistinguishable from measles (9), it is very important to identify vaccine reactions to avoid unnecessary isolation of the patient, as well as the need for contact tracing and other labor-intensive public health interventions."
"During the measles outbreak in California in 2015, a large number of suspected cases occurred in recent vaccines. Of the 194 measles virus sequences obtained in the United States in 2015, 73 were identified as vaccine sequences."
You might also be interested in the following:
Crying Wolf Over Measles Outbreaks : Lather. Rinse. Repeat.
Claims they are caused by vaccine hesitancy are inconsistent with CDC's own data.
https://dfoster.substack.com/p/crying-wolf-over-measles-outbreaks