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Infectious diseases expert will not allow his kids to be vaccinated with the H1N1 vaccine
Just before we went to press with this issue, a 14-year-old girl in the UK died shortly after receiving a vaccine shot for the human papillomavirus (HPV), to prevent cervical cancer. Apparently, about an hour after the shot, Natalie Morton became pale, stopped breathing and fainted. Rescuers were not able to save her life. In his article for the Daily Mail (September 29), Daniel Martin stated, “A number of her classmates have reported alleged side-effects from the jab.”
Almost immediately following the girl’s death, health officials were spinning the news that Natalie was already ill at the time the vaccine was administered. Are they protecting the health of our children or are they protecting the profits of pharmaceutical companies?
At the time of writing, the Department of Health in the UK had not confirmed whether or not it would allow tens of thousands of girls across the country to be vaccinated in the coming months. The Cervarix vaccine is being given to all girls aged 12 and 13 in the UK in a nationwide program. So far, more than 1.4 million doses have been given out and all under the age of 18 will have received it by 2011.
The Daily Mail article also stated, “Around the world, Cervarix and another version, Gardasil, have been linked to 30 deaths as well as cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome, a little-understood immune disorder.”
Natalie Morton’s death is a serious wake up call to anyone considering being jabbed with any vaccine, including the proposed vaccine for H1NI.
In a disturbing You Tube video, which was still online as of September 30, (www.youtube.com/watch), Dr. Kent Holtorf, an expert in infectious diseases, spoke to Fox News as part of the network’s “Tracking H1N1” focus.
Dr. Holtorf unequivocally warned against the H1N1 vaccine, stating that it had been “rushed to market,” it was comprised of a “high level of adjuncts.” He also stated that it is “known to cause autism in children,” and that “it’s a proven neurotoxin.” When asked if he would allow his children to receive the vaccine, Dr. Holtorf responded, “I definitely would not.”
Ultimately, the infectious diseases expert believes “it is too big a risk.”
References:
www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article
www.youtube.com/watch
Friends for sale on Facebook
They say you can’t buy friends, bit a new service from an Internet-based social media marketing company is about to prove that old adage incorrect. uSocial.net, the company that recently began selling followers on Twitter, has launched a new suite of services for Facebook, enabling people to purchase friends and fans based on their needs.
But why would people want to buy their friends on Facebook? Well, according to company CEO Leon Hill, that’s a very easy question to answer.
“Facebook is an extremely effective marketing tool, as anyone with a large number of targeted friends can attest to,” Hill says. “The only problem is that it can be extremely difficult to achieve such a following, which is where we come in.”
uSocial says it can accurately target friends to be added to a user’s account by interest group, industry and geographic location, making marketing any product or service to them extremely easy.
Night brain
Our brain uses 20 percent of the oxygen that enters our bloodstream. The brain only makes up about two percent of our body mass, yet consumes more oxygen than any other organ in the body, making it extremely susceptible to damage related to oxygen deprivation. So breathe deep to keep your brain happy and swimming in oxygenated cells. The brain is much more active at night than during the day. Logically, you would think that all the moving around, complicated calculations and tasks and general interaction we do on a daily basis during our working hours would take a lot more brain power than, say, lying in bed. Turns out, the opposite is true. When you turn off, your brain turns on. Scientists don’t yet know why this is, but you can thank the hard work of your brain while you sleep for all those pleasant dreams.
Blondes have more hair
They’re said to have more fun, and they definitely have more hair. Hair colour determines how dense the hair on your head is. The average human has 100,000 hair follicles, each of which is capable of producing 20 individual hairs during a person’s lifetime. Blondes average 146,000 follicles while people with black hair tend to have about 110,000 follicles. Those with brown hair fit the average with 100,000 follicles and redheads have the least dense hair, with about 86,000 follicles.
Woman’s nose best
Women are born better smellers than men and remain better smellers over life. Studies have shown that women are more able to correctly pinpoint just what a smell is. Women were better able to identify citrus, vanilla, cinnamon and coffee smells. While women are overall better smellers, there is an unfortunate two percent of the population with no sense of smell at all.
– www.wellspringdaily.com |