[PAA-Discuss] Capitalism: A Love Story .....openingatAngelicaThursday night
robert
gram.graham at sbcglobal.net
Fri Oct 2 23:01:37 EDT 2009
MANDATORY VACCINATION IN NY
SEPTEMBER 29, 2009. Health workers in New York State must take the Swine Flu
vaccine. That's a new regulation. Take the vaccine or get fired.
But several thousand of those health workers are staging a protest in
Albany, and surveys have indicated that many more will refuse the shot.
During an ordinary flu season, between 40 and 50 percent of NY health
workers decline the vaccine.
Why? They don't think it's necessary, and they worry about the dangers of
the vaccine. This time around, they're particularly worried, because the
federal government has barred any lawsuits against Swine Flu vaccine
manufacturers, in the event of serious adverse effects.
Why would the feds make such an exemption for these pharmaceutical
companies?
Let's say you bought a new car, and as you were driving down the freeway,
the wheels fell off and you crashed into a barrier and sustained major
injuries. Would the auto manufacturer deserve to wriggle off the hook?
Common sense tells us that, when the government guarantees vaccine makers a
clear profit with no risks, something is very wrong. Adverse effects, like
nervous system damage, are expected.
Would you sign a contract to buy a new car, if at the last minute, the oily
salesman remarked, "Of course, you know, if the engine drops on the ground,
you can't sue anybody."
To examine the "logic" behind this no-risk regulation for vaccine
manufacturers, read the following quote from Dr. Tadataka Yamada, who works
at the Gates Foundation. The doctor states he owns stock in GSK, one of the
firms making Swine Flu vaccine. His remarks were published in the New
England Journal of Medicine on August 20.
"The generous donations [of vaccine] made by Sanofi-Aventis and
GlaxoSmithKline set an example that all manufacturers should emulate. In
return for their responsible actions, it would be reasonable for
manufacturers to be indemnified against liability from potential adverse
reactions to their vaccines."
What?
Yamada is saying: Well, these companies are good guys, so let's not punish
them if they make a destructive vaccine. It's quid pro quo. They help us, we
help them. It's only fair. They're doing their best. Why should we punish
them?
Somehow, there is a connection between generosity---giving away
vaccines---and zero accountability for making a destructive product. Sorry,
it doesn't wash.
If a corn farmer who brings five million ears of corn to market every year
also gives away 10,000 ears of corn to the poor, but much of his corn is
poisoned or filled with dangerous mold, he should be protected from
lawsuits?
And on top of that, everybody HAS TO eat the corn or face loss of their
jobs?
Mainstream reporters and their editors should be having a field day with
government-mandated no-risk for vaccine manufacturers. This should be a
scandal of huge proportions. But of course, that's not the case.
Not in this climate of fear about Swine Flu. It reminds me of the rush to
judgment of federal legislators and the press, after 9/11. "If the president
wants to attack Iraq, we have to go along. Who cares whether Saddam had
anything to do with 9/11. We can't 'back down.'"
If our legal system were functioning properly, it would be impossible to
cancel risk for maiming or killing citizens, while at the same time ordering
people to accept the medical treatment that carries that risk. A New York
court would strike down the regulation that demands health workers take the
Swine Flu vaccine.
The few drug companies who can deliver hundreds of millions of vaccinations
know what they're doing. They're leveraging their position. The companies
are getting the real immunity. From prosecution. From judgments.
JON RAPPOPORT www.nomorefakenews.com.
_____
From: discuss-bounces at paa-tx.org [mailto:discuss-bounces at paa-tx.org] On
Behalf Of Ron and Kris Graham
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2009 7:56 PM
To: 'Lee Loe'; 'PAA discussion'
Subject: Re: [PAA-Discuss] Capitalism: A Love Story
.....openingatAngelicaThursday night
Thanks for the e-mail, Lee. I appreciate it.
The doctor said Cade probably got bronchitis first and then flu secondarily.
She said his white count is good, but he tested positive for Type A
Influenza. She said she thinks it's probably the H1N1 variety, but she said
she'd have to send the nasal swab to the CDC in Washington, D.C. to have it
tested for sure. She said it'd take two weeks for the results to come back.
I guess they're backed up. I don't know whether or not she is going to send
the nasal swab. Maybe she has to per orders of the U.S. government or the
CDC. The nurse who did Cade's blood work said she's seen a lot of
bronchitis, pneumonia and flu because I asked her what people were coming in
for. It's pretty early in the season for this stuff to start showing up.
Anyhow, he doesn't have pneumonia. His lungs are clear. The doctor said if
he did start having trouble breathing to bring him back in the morning and
if he's not a lot better by Monday to bring him in for a chest x-ray. I hope
the medicines she's put him on will work and he'll be feeling better by
tomorrow or the next day. He's on quarantine until 10-8 and can't go back to
work until then.
He's on Bactrim for the upper respiratory infection and Tamiflu. Supposedly
the Tamiflu shortens the flu by 1 to 2 days and keeps it from replicating
into other cells. She told me to keep him on the Mucinex DM, and she wants
him to take a more powerful Tylenol for fever and body aches. He's on the
Tylenol for arthritis which works for 8 hours instead of 4.
He just went to bed because he feels like hell. I made him some soup but he
just didn't want it. He did eat some sherbet earlier, though.
The doctor said she didn't think Ron and I would catch this flu because
older adults seem to have some sort of immunity to it, but I'm not taking
any chances. I've been washing my hands like crazy, spraying Lysol all over
the house and drinking the Echinacea tea every day. She said this H1N1 flu
is striking healthy young people in their teens and 20's, but one of Cade's
managers has a 9 year old son who was just diagnosed with it!
I'm telling you I think this H1N1 flu was engineered in a government
laboratory and Ron does, too. I think somebody set it loose on the world,
and Ron thinks it is the same mutated version of the 1918 flu that killed
his grandmother when she was 35. She died of pneumonia from that flu. He
thinks the "Spanish" flu of 1918 has been weaponized and this so called H1N1
flu is the direct result of that weaponization. The 1918 flu killed over
100,000 in the U.S. alone and worldwide I think 2 to 3 million died. Think
about it, guys. What better way to see how a biological weapon works than to
create it, set it loose on the population and then sit back and watch. Ron
said scientists took tissue samples from dead bodies (people that died from
the 1918 flu) in Alaskan permafrost or somewhere really cold where the
bodies were still intact and tried to reproduce that flu! No one knows
whether or not the deadly 1918 flu was reproduced in a U.S. government lab.
There is only one way to know for sure whether or not the H1N1 flu is the
mutated version of the 1918 "Spanish" flu and that is to test the H1N1 virus
and compare it to the tissue samples of the 1918 variety......if those
tissue samples exist.
Here's another weird thing. One of Cade's managers called him a little while
ago and talked to him and then asked to speak to me. She wanted to know if I
knew FOR SURE if he was infected with the "swine" flu. I told her exactly
what the doctor told me. I asked her why she wanted to know, and she said
she had to fill out some sort of paperwork or something if he was in fact,
infected with the "swine" flu. Now, why do you suppose the manager of Olive
Garden would have to fill out paperwork if somebody was infected with
"swine" flu? Did someone from the CDC instruct the managers of restaurants
and other large venues to do this if their employees became sickened with
H1N1? I find this extremely interesting. I doubt seriously if they have to
fill out any paperwork at all for the "regular" seasonal flu. My suspicions
are definitely raised about this, and I don't think I'm being paranoid. I
wouldn't be a bit surprised if this flu wasn't released deliberately in
countries in order to thin the population. Here in the U.S. young, healthy
people have died from this crap and pregnant women seem to be especially
susceptible to the H1N1 flu. Many have died from it. We think the government
wants to track this H1N1 flu, see where it's spreading, who it's afflicting,
who it's killing etc. The U.S. has been trying to weaponize viruses for a
long time including the Ebola virus and others. Scary stuff, guys.
Anyhow, I hope Cade starts feeling better by tomorrow and starts on the road
to recovery. This particular flu is a real bitch, and it's knocked him off
his trotters. Of course, no flu is fun. I've had my share and wanted to eat
a bullet every time, frankly, rather than continue suffering.
Thanks again to those people who wrote to me with well wishes for my son.
Kris
_____
From: Lee Loe [mailto:leeloe at igc.org]
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2009 3:44 PM
To: graham2639 at mindspring.com
Subject: RE: [PAA-Discuss] Capitalism: A Love Story .....
openingatAngelicaThursday night
Glad you and Ron are taking precautions, Kris. Hope Cade's doc helps him get
well; what you described sounds pretty dibilitating and nasty. Stay well,
Lee L
_____
From: discuss-bounces at paa-tx.org [mailto:discuss-bounces at paa-tx.org] On
Behalf Of Ron and Kris Graham
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2009 1:01 PM
To: 'robert'; 'C. Lee Taylor'; 'Bart Boyce'
Cc: 'Mark Lacy'; 'PAA discussion'; art.browning at gmail.com; 'eric
ribellarsi'; 'robert graham'
Subject: Re: [PAA-Discuss] Capitalism: A Love Story .....
openingatAngelicaThursday night
Thanks, hon, for your well wishes. Cade has a doctor's appointment at 2:30
pm this afternoon. I want her to listen to his lungs. When he starts
coughing, it sounds really terrible, and it's hard for him to catch his
breath. I can't let this turn into pneumonia.
Keep an eye on Shelby, Robert. She doesn't want this crap whatever it is.
I'm thinking it's flu because of the high fever, body aches, joint pain,
horrible cough and stuffed up nose.
Ron and I are drinking Echinacea tea with honey like mad dogs. It boosts the
immune system. We can't afford to get sick.
Kris
_____
From: robert [mailto:gram.graham at sbcglobal.net]
Sent: Friday, October 02, 2009 10:12 AM
To: graham2639 at mindspring.com; 'C. Lee Taylor'; 'Bart Boyce'
Cc: 'PAA discussion'; 'Kathleen Kain'; 'Jon Axford'; 'eric ribellarsi';
'robert graham'; art.browning at gmail.com; 'Mark Lacy'
Subject: RE: [PAA-Discuss] Capitalism: A Love Story ..... opening
atAngelicaThursday night
Kris - I am glad you reminded me of the flu....shelby too has got
something....a non productive cough and she has been tired and grumpy when I
have talked to her every night this week (phone) so I should not subject her
and others to what she has. So, I doubt if we will make it. Hoping that
your son recovers quickly.
robert
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.409 / Virus Database: 270.14.3/2409 - Release Date: 10/02/09
06:46:00
No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 8.5.409 / Virus Database: 270.14.3/2409 - Release Date: 10/02/09
06:46:00
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://paa-tx.org/pipermail/discuss_paa-tx.org/attachments/20091002/d6efe522/attachment.htm>
More information about the Discuss
mailing list