The Truth About Vaccination and Immunization by Lily Loat [Whale, July 2002] Who sets out indisputable facts and figures--many of them from official statistics--which leave no doubt that the preventive measures, so-called, actually cause more deaths and suffering than the diseases they are supposed to prevent PART I. SMALLPOX AND VACCINATION The Nature Cure View of Smallpox The Conditions that Produce Smallpox Sanitary and Economic Improvements Banish Smallpox How to Avoid Smallpox Smallpox Inoculation Ridiculous Adulation of Jenner Smallpox of the Cow: A Complete Deception Jenners Horsegrease The Arm-to-Aim System Glycerinated Calf-Lymph Introduced in 1897 The Manufacture of Lymph What is the Lymph"? Dangers of Vaccination Dropping the Arm-to-Arm Method did not stop Vaccination Fatalities Infants Die of Vaccination as well as Older People Re-Vaccination has more Severe Results Vaccination Kills Infants Table: DEATHS FROM VACCINATION 1933-46 Failure of Vaccination to Protect from Smallpox The Vaccinated Die of Smallpox Vaccinated Children Take Smallpox and Die of it Re-Vaccinated Smallpox No Protection from Recent Vaccination The So-called "Unsuccessful" Vaccinations Smallpox in Vaccinated and Unvaccinated Communities Smallpox and Vaccination in Germany When England was Most Vaccinated she had Most Smallpox Table: smallpox deaths and infant vaccinations 1856-1945 The Vaccinated and Unvaccinated Fatality Rates Why is the Vaccination Superstition Maintained PART II. DIPHTHERIA AND DIPTHERIA IMMUNIZATION Sanitation and Healthier Living Conquer Diphtheria Campaign for Diphtheria Immunization What Proportion of the Child Population has been Immunized Other Diseases have Declined even more than Diphtheria Table: Death-rates of children aged 0-5, 1911-1945 Increase in Diphtheria in Germany and France Scotland’s Diphtheria Deaths down by Four-Fifths before Immunization Table: Diphtheria deaths in Scotland in 1939-1949 Estimated Percentages of Scottish children Inoculated Diphtheria in the Immunized Diphtheria Deaths in the Immunized Immunization Disasters Poliomyelitis after Inoculation PART 1 SMALLPOX AND VACCINATION The Nature Cure View of Smallpox ALL acute disease is a healing effort of Nature, an attempt to rid the system of its inherited and acquired impurities. The Nature Cure practitioner regards colds, fevers, skin eruptions and inflammatory processes as Nature’s attempts to eliminate disease conditions from the system. This has been admitted in the case of smallpox, even by some eminent orthodox doctors. Though that disease, in its worst forms, may seem a desperate remedy, it is only so because the condition of the sufferer has been so reduced by desperately insanitary conditions of living, either environmental or personal or both. Anyone who cares to look into the matter will find that many of those who have recovered from the purifying effects of smallpox have enjoyed better health after the attack than before it. Smallpox has, in fact, been known to eradicate consumption. The Registrar-General’s death statistics show also that in former times, when smallpox epidemics carried off some thousands of people, they did not increase the general death-rate from all diseases. This shows that those who died from smallpox were suffering from a concurrent condition of ill-health which would have produced a fatal result in any case. Dr. Farr, the statistician of the General Register Office, pointed but that the general death-rate per 1,000 of the population was not raised by the great smallpox epidemic of 1871-72. Here are the general death rates (per 1,000 living) for England and Wales from 1870 to 1875: 22.9, 22.6, 21.3, 21.0 ,22.2, 22.7. Dr. Robert Watt, lecturer on the theory and practice of medicine at Glasgow, discovered from the figures in the Glasgow burial registers over a space of thirty years (from 1783-1812), divided into five periods of six years each, that while smallpox had diminished, measles and—to a lesser extent—whooping cough had increased, so that a child had no better chance of reaching its tenth year in the last period of the thirty years than in the first. Dr. Farr, in the 35th Annual Report of the Registrar-General, p. 224, wrote: The zymotic diseases replace each other; and when one is rooted out it is apt to be replaced by others, which ravage the human race indifferently wherever the conditions of healthy life are wanting. Smallpox occurs for the most part in people whose vitality is low, the composition of whose blood is abnormal and in whom there is an accumulation of morbid matter. In the nineties of the last century it was found in London and other great towns that smallpox occurred chiefly amongst the inhabitants of common lodging-houses, tramp wards, and Salvation Army shelters. Formerly it was the scourge of dwellers in insanitary slums, where there was no provision of pure water, where the overcrowding was intense, and where dirt and filth were everywhere. In 1853 Lord Shaftesbur...