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Polio — Still Going Strong
Dr. Salk and his polio vaccineMost people think polio is a disease of the past.  We remember the vaccine sugar cubes we had to take, and children who ended up in wheelchairs.  The real story of polio is a big secret, however.  It has by no means gone away.  It is with us today, carrying a host of new names: MS, ALS, Eppstein Barr, chronic fatigue syndrome, and there are lots more.  It used to be called “palsy.”  Way back in 1878 when it was found that dogs dosed with lead developed motor-neuron damage, toxicity became a suspect.  As infantile paralysis broke out a few years later in Massachusetts, pesticides were determined to be the culprits.  Yet health agencies were warring against “germs,” and chemicals were our allies against bacteria and viruses.

As the golden age of pesticides surged into high gear, children (who are especially vulnerable to toxicity) became paralysed in greater numbers, and the disease was now called “polio.”  Scientists pushed to find a virus responsible, ignoring the signs that pointed to environmental and agricultural toxins.  In 1947, Jonas Salk tried to isolate the virus in monkey tissues he worked with, eventually formulating a “vaccine” made of diseased cells and formaldehyde which was tested on 400,000 American children.  What happened?  As fast as they were vaccinated, hundreds of children developed paralytic polio, with many crippled in the injected arm itself.

To protect government authorities, Dr. Salk and the vaccine manufacturers, polio statistics had to be hastily changed.  The “new” diagnosis of polio required a victim to show symptoms of paralysis for at least 60 days, and milder forms of the disease were named “aseptic meningitis.”  Now the incidence of polio began to drop (the success of the “vaccine”!), while those of meningitis began to soar.  Today, Jonas Salk is credited for saving the world from polio, but we have many kinds of auto-immune and neurological diseases we had never seen before.  Polio itself is now called “acute flaccid paralysis,” and health authorities tell us there is no cure.Click the “read more” link below for the full polio story by Janine Roberts.

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