Liste des Groupes | Revenir à rb tech |
Am 15.04.2025 um 11:15 schrieb John B.:On Tue, 15 Apr 2025 10:27:57 +0200, Rolf Mantel>
<news@hartig-mantel.de> wrote:
Am 15.04.2025 um 02:40 schrieb Radey Shouman:zen cycle <funkmasterxx@hotmail.com> writes:>>A direct effect of the anti-vax movement.>
I'm in favor of measles vaccination, and never said otherwise. I took
the vaccine back when it was quite new, and never regretted it. I
believe most of the Texas and New Mexico measles cases are among
Mennonites, who may have a different opinion. I am not in favor of
trying to force them to vaccinate.
>
The anti-vax movement used to be the province of wealthy,
overprivileged, nutty granola types. Why do you suppose it has spread
more widely?
The Anti-vax movement has been strongly linked to the Nazis since the
early 1930's "we cannot have Jewish doctors poison our pure aryan blood
lines".
The "Jewish Domination" Consipracy claims of those times have lived on
in the alt-right movement, just replacing the word "Jewish" by the word
"globalist". I am absolutely not surprised that the rise to power of
the Alt-Right has given popularity to the Anti-Vaxxers as well.
Don't all U.S. States require vaccination or inoculation before a
child is allowed to attend school?
The requirement seems to be for public schools, leaving Church schools
either uncovered or covered but unenforced. By home-schooling, parents
can avoid the problem altogether.
>
<https://churchleaders.com/news/507626-pastor-landon-schott-celebrating-low-vax-rates-measles.html>
>
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.