Right, and driving is irresponsible, because some people crash, and going to sleep is risky, because some people don't wake up, and air travel is lunacy, because planes have been known to fail - and they're 30,000 feet up!!!
You need to get a sense of perspective. The risks of catching the things which kids are immunised against are far greater and far more probable than side-effects of the immunisation itself.
Don't you realise that if that wasn't the case there isn't a single doctor who would agree to carry out the injections?
I don't think it's a case of not realising. I've met plenty of parents who come out with ignorant and selfish comments like "If everyone else get's their kids done, mine will be safe so I don't need to bother".
Sometimes I wonder how I manage to get through the day without murdering someone.
I don't think like that at all. All kids would be safer not having the MMR IMO.
There are theories that the MMR actually contributes to the measles outbreaks.
We don't have bad sanitation that we used to have, which spread diseases.
It's better to have measles, mumps etc., as a child than as an adult. They are stronger viruses in adulthood.
The MMR does not stop a child contracting measles.
Another thing is a lot of parents who think there child hasn't had the measles jab at school, possibly have.
The form is not a consent form, there is a small opt out box to tick.
Hackney parents became aware that the nurse was throwing the forms with the opt out box ticked in the bin and jabbing the children.
This is dangerous as some children were opted out due to allergic reactions from previous jabs.
Just to be safe, we had to keep outr kids off school on the day of the jabs.
It's "Commandment One of every.....
It's mostly adult males who become sterile from Mumps. It's very dangerous to have it as an adult.The TB jab? Whenever one person gets it, they jab the whole college.
and yet Tuberculosis (TB) is on the rise in the UK. How could that have happened?
I had it and a few days later had acute bronchitis and water on the lungs.
May need to re open those convelescence homes on the East coast again.
Londoners were sent to Suffolk and Norfolk.
Sorry, I'm a bit confused now. Your location says "mostly planet earth" and your now talking about aliens and how Roswell wasn't a hoax. Are you saying you've visited other planets now or been abducted? If so, can you please go take a look at the moon and find that fekkin American flag please.
Astro, no there aren't!!
Such suggestions are simply the ramblings of people who have little knowledge and less intelligence. Only yesterday I was reading an article (memory FAIL: can't remember if it was the one I posted here) which detailed the requirement for MMR vaccination in US states, some of which have a 96% take up. They have negligible measles cases; yet here - where the take up is less than 85% - we had nearly 1500 last year, including two deaths. If the vaccination was causing measles, that statistic would have to be the other way round - since they have a larger population and a larger percentage of people having the vaccination in the US.
This is the same nonsense that Jeni Barnett was dribbling on LBC.It's better to have measles, mumps etc., as a child than as an adult. They are stronger viruses in adulthood.
It's better not to have measles, mumps, rubella AT ALL. For most children, it is a simple childhood rite of passage - I had mumps, measles, and chicken pox - but for some it causes permanent (and sometimes crippling) organ damage and some people die.
The sensible choice is not between having the diseases in childhood or later, it's between allowing the them to flourish and eradicating them.
(Oh, and it's nonsense to say that the viruses are stronger in adulthood! How woudl the virus know whether to attack an adult or a child? It's exactly the same virus but guess what - the adult body and its immune system cannot cope with them so well!!)
In the sense that seatbelts and airbags don't stop you being killed in a car accident, perhaps not. But essentially, it does.The MMR does not stop a child contracting measles.
1. Evidence? Where is it?Hackney parents became aware that the nurse was throwing the forms with the opt out box ticked in the bin and jabbing the children.
2. Doesn't matter. The actions of a nurse do not affect the argument about the risks/benefits of the vaccination.
No, it doesn't. UFOs are investigated by US Air Force pilots regularly.
What the US government says it that it is not aware of any persuasive evidence that earth has been visited by aliens; that the Roswell incident was caused by a weather balloon (though most now take the view that it was probably a high altitude cold-war spying balloon - the U2 did not come into service for another 8 years or so) and that there are no secret files on UFO reports and sightings.
I've seen UFOs on many occasions - always at night. I have no reason to believe they were anything other than planes I couldn't identify or something like that.
That documentary made by And and Dec ?
I always find that funny - the entire point of the UFO designation, is to label things when you don't know what they are, when they are in the air*. Personally I throw garibaldi biscuits at peoples heads shouting "LOOK a UFO".
"BUT Its a biscuit" they cry, hair all a-crumb.
"Aah but WHAT KIND of biscuit"
"Ow!"
"Technically now its a UFB but I intend to keep throwing these, as I don't particularly like them"
"Ow! I don't know. I missed biscuit class at school"
*and as Douglas Adams once pointed out, everything is flying until it actually hits the ground
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