Anonymous ID: 4ffbfa April 13, 2020, 12:59 p.m. No.8779786   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9827 >>9832

Anons, found this while looking into the fake news 60 minutes Peter Navarro story.

In 76, the government ordered a vaccination program that vaccinated 24% of the population.

turns out the vaccine poisoned people giving them a neuro muscular disorder called Guillain–Barré syndrome

 

>check out the Hussein Friendly Headline

Swine Flu Is Bad, But Panic Is Dangerous

April 30, 2009 / 3:59 AM / CBS

 

Perhaps the best example of governmental overreaction to influenza came in 1976, when an outbreak of swine flu struck Fort Dix Army base in New Jersey. After a 19-year-old private died, President Gerald Ford ordered a nationwide vaccination program that eventually reached 40 million people, or about 24 percent of the United States population at the time.

 

Without the vaccine, Health Secretary F. David Matthews solemnly predicted at the time: "We will see a return of the 1918 flu virus that is the most virulent form of the flu. In 1918 a half million Americans died. The projections are that this virus will kill one million Americans in 1976."

>sound familiar??

 

The vaccination program turned out to be a deadly mistake.

Reports soon surfaced about the vaccine causing a neuromuscular disorder called Guillain-Barré syndrome, and vaccinations were halted about two months after they began.

 

No swine flu epidemic ever erupted. The outbreak was limited to Fort Dix, and about 500 Americans likely died as a result of the vaccine.

 

>check this shit out

<It's true that Mr. Obama appears more level-headed than his predecessor, and the state of medicine (including anti-viral drugs) has advanced considerably. But even the CDC and WHO are hardly prescient: the 1976 episode should remain a cautionary tale of how not to respond to an outbreak of influenza.

 

A linked article from this one titled Swine flu ‘debacle’ of 1976 is recalled tingled the almonds. Potus recently twatted about a Swine Flu Debacle on April 7

Anonymous ID: 4ffbfa April 13, 2020, 1:04 p.m. No.8779827   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9904

>>8779786

sauce for CBS

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/swine-flu-is-bad-but-panic-is-dangerous/

 

http://archive.is/kYT3g

Swine Flu Debacle

By Shari Roan

April 27, 2009

|12 AM

Warren D. Ward, 48, was in high school when the swine flu threat of 1976 swept the U.S. The Whittier man remembers the episode vividly because a relative died in the 1918 flu pandemic, and the 1976 illness was feared to be a direct descendant of the deadly virus.

“The government wanted everyone to get vaccinated,” Ward said. “But the epidemic never really broke out. It was a threat that never materialized.

What did materialize were cases of a rare side effect thought to be linked to the shot.

The unexpected development cut short the vaccination effort – an unprecedented national campaign – after 10 weeks.

The episode triggered an enduring public backlash against flu vaccination, embarrassed the federal government and cost the director of the U.S. Center for Disease Control, now known as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, his job.