Parents who received the first wave of (live) measles shots in - TopicsExpress



          

Parents who received the first wave of (live) measles shots in 1963, and all those since, were subsequently stripped of their capacity to transfer natural immuno-protection to their baby, via the Placenta & Colostrum, due to the cross-contamination factor (hybrid measles virus now embedded in the mother/father’s germ line DNA – manifesting in a more virulent strain of measles, known as ‘Atypical Measles‘) generated by the shot, passed on to the new generation. The current generation have literally become unwitting hosts to a form of viral & bacterial roulette, an ideal breeding ground for the proliferation/weaponizing of viral & bacterial infections. The MMR Vaccine has co-infected an entire generation of children with a more virulent strain of Measles, now referred to as Atypical measles (AMS). The Medical Industry has reluctantly confirmed this vaccine-derived mutation circulating throughout the environment: Atypical measles occurred in children who received formalin-inactivated (killed) measles vaccine that was in use in the United States from 1963 to 1968. These children developed high fever, a rash that was most prominent on the extremities and often included petechiae, and a high rate of pneumonitis. Recent studies in monkeys indicate that this illness was caused by antigen-antibody immune complexes resulting from incomplete maturation of the antibody response to the vaccine. The Journal of Infectious Diseases ‘Atypical measles can occur in people who were immunized with a killed virus vaccine that was used from 1963-1967 and then exposed to the original virus. It can also occur in people who were immunized with the current vaccine but, for some reason, failed to develop immunity, and in people who are immunosuppressed.‘ Note: ‘The symptoms of atypical measles are different and more severe than the symptoms of typical measles.‘ Symptoms of Vaccine-derived hybrid strain of Measles (Atypical Measles/AMS): 1. Maculopapular ‘characterised by flat spots (macules) and tiny bumps (papules) on the surface of a tissue—usually understood to mean the skin or an organ (e.g., the liver or spleen).’ 2. Petechial ‘pertaining to tiny red or purple spots caused by an extravasation of blood into the skin.’ 3. Vesicular ‘composed of or relating to small, saclike bodies.’ 4. Urticarial ‘hives; a vascular reaction of the upper dermis marked by transient appearance of slightly elevated patches (wheals) which are redder or paler than the surrounding skin and often attended by severe itching.’ Excerpt from the upcoming VRM: The Measles Report
Posted on: Sat, 05 Apr 2014 16:01:16 +0000

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