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WHY YOU WANT TO GET OUT OF taking FLU VACCS AND HOW TO DO IT
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Don't let yourself be scared into getting the "vaccine" for this Swine Flu.
This is nothing but media and government scare tactics to divert people's
attention away from the crashing economy and exposure of the criminals in
and out of government that are involved in this huge swindle.
PRINT THE FORM FOR EXEMPTION and have it ready
http://www.vaccineinfo.net/exemptions/relexemptletterlaw.shtml

The 'New' Flu - The Pieces Come Together
From Patricia Doyle, PhD
4-26-09

It appears that the pharma industry is readying itself for the
vaccine bandwagon...and huge profits
Don't tell me that they are going to try to fool the public into
believing that the 1976 vaccine will protect against this resurrected
Spanish Flu bug? No way. People should NEVER take the 1976 vaccine.
Those who had it then got a worse disease, their nerves melted.
Don't do that to your children.

You think my immune system can't beat a lousy FLU? I'm Breast
fed for crissakes. I can beat it. BUT MERCURY...AUTISM?
A retard for life? Mom, think this OUT!!!
 

"1976 Swine Flu
The CDC is conducting studies now that might show whether seasonal
vaccination might protect people against swine flu. It's also possible that
people who were vaccinated in the 1976 swine flu outbreak, which many flu
experts believed was the beginning of a pandemic at the time, are protected,
he said.

Vaccine makers are taking the initial steps toward making shots
against swine flu. Baxter International Inc., a maker of both seasonal and
pandemic vaccines, has requested samples of the swine virus for laboratory
testing, said Christopher Bona, a spokesman for Deerfield, Illinois-based
Baxter. GlaxoSmithKline Plc, based in London, has had conversations with
WHO's flu division that's responsible for distributing flu virus samples to
drugmakers, said Deborah Alspach, a spokeswoman.

Other companies that make flu vaccine include Novartis AG, of Basel,
Switzerland, and Sanofi-Aventis SA, of Paris."

Swine Flu Emergency Caused By New Variant of Old Bug (Update2)
By John Lauerman and Jason Gale

April 26 (Bloomberg) -- International health officials are wrestling
with how to respond to a swine flu from Mexico that's infecting people,
causing a range of illnesses, and even death.

The World Health Organization called the outbreak a "public health
emergency of international concern" yesterday, and as many as 81 deaths in
Mexico were linked to the virus, normally transmitted among pigs. Eleven
cases in California, Kansas and Texas, all of them mild, have been connected
as well, and at least eight students in New York are being tested for
whether they match the Mexico strain, health officials said.

Fears of a lethal pandemic lie in the nature of flu germs, which
mutate readily and can become virulent by exchanging genes with related
influenza viruses. While the H5N1 bird virus that spread across Asia in the
last few years, killing millions of fowl and several hundred people, never
gained genes to spread easily among humans, the Mexican swine flu already
has, said Malik Peiris, a microbiologist from the University of Hong Kong.

"The concern is that this virus has the ability to transmit from
humans to humans because a number of the cases who got infection have had no
direct exposure to swine," said Peiris, who has studied the SARS and avian
flu viruses. "That is certainly a cause for concern."

Health officials said they are trying to determine how the virus
gained its ability to infect and spread among humans.

Swine-Flu Emergency

Mexican President Felipe Calderon declared a swine-flu emergency,
giving him powers to order quarantines and suspend public events in the
nation, where 1,324 patients are hospitalized with flu-like symptoms.

Authorities closed schools until May 6 in Mexico City and the states
of Mexico and San Luis Potosi, where infections have been concentrated, and
canceled most public and official activities.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an
Atlanta-based agency, is leading the search for more cases than the 11 it
has confirmed as of yesterday.
The latest U.S. tally includes two adults residing at the same
address in Dickinson County, Kansas. Neither of the patients was
hospitalized, the state's <http://www.kdheks.gov/>health department said in
a statement on its Web site yesterday. One is still ill and being treated,
and one is recovering, it said. One of the patients had recently traveled to
Mexico, flying in and out of Wichita, according to the statement.

New Zealand Students

Three teachers and 22 students from Auckland's Rangitoto high school
are being tested for swine flu after returning to New Zealand's most
populous city from Los Angeles following a three week trip to Mexico,
Stuff.co.nz reported on its Web site. Some of the travelers had symptoms of
flu-like illness and were being isolated as a precaution pending test
results, it said, citing Auckland's public health service.

Japan began screening for fever in travelers returning from Mexico
fevers, the country's health ministry said in a statement yesterday. A
British Airways Plc crewmember was hospitalized in north London with
suspected swine flu after arriving yesterday on a flight from Mexico City.
Tests showed he doesn't have the bug, Agence France-Presse said, citing a
hospital spokesman.

Outbreaks in Mexico and the U.S. warrant an urgent assessment of its
potential to spark the first influenza pandemic in 41 years, the WHO said
yesterday. The Geneva-based United Nations agency held an emergency meeting
and found that more evidence is needed to determine whether the level of
pandemic alert should be increased, it said.
Pandemic Threat

The WHO's pandemic threat level, a six-stage measure, is currently
at 3. Evidence of increased human-to-human spread of a new virus would move
it to level 4, according to the WHO Web site.

Health officials in the U.S. are asking both doctors and patients to
be on the lookout for suspicious cases of flu. The lung virus normally
causes symptoms such as coughing and sneezing, and can also bring on muscle
and joint aches, headaches, and even diarrhea and vomiting, according to the
CDC.

At a time when scientists can tailor drugs to match a patient's
genetic profile and people live longer than ever, the flu, first described
by Hippocrates 2,400 years ago, still has the power to make millions
bed-bound for a week and kill the very young, the elderly and those weakened
by chronic disease.

The CDC estimates the germ is linked to more than 30,000 U.S. deaths
annually.

In most cases, adults can resist succumbing to flu viruses that are
identical or very similar to those they've been exposed to before. "New"
viruses that the human immune system hasn't seen earlier are the most
dangerous, because they can overwhelm the body's defenses.

1918 Pandemic

Flu germs are classified by two proteins, one known by the letter H,
for hemagglutinin, and the other N, for neuraminidase. The Mexican swine flu
is an H1N1 flu, the same subtype that caused the pandemic of 1918. Many
less-dangerous descendants of that virus are seasonal H1N1 viruses
circulating worldwide today, scientists said.
The dominant form of flu circulating in the U.S. in the most recent
flu season was an H1N1, said Frederick Hayden, professor of clinical
virology at the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center in
Charlottesville. That suggests that people who got this year's flu vaccine,
which gave protection against the H1N1 virus, might also have some
protection against the swine flu, he said.

"We need to take the [blood] of individuals who got last season's
vaccine and see whether there's any evidence of cross- reactivity for this
new strain," he said in a telephone interview. "We need to do the same thing
with patients who have had recent infection with the human H1N1 strain."

1976 Swine Flu

The CDC is conducting studies now that might show whether seasonal
vaccination might protect people against swine flu. It's also possible that
people who were vaccinated in the 1976 swine flu outbreak, which many flu
experts believed was the beginning of a pandemic at the time, are protected,
he said.
Vaccine makers are taking the initial steps toward making shots
against swine flu. Baxter International Inc., a maker of both seasonal and
pandemic vaccines, has requested samples of the swine virus for laboratory
testing, said Christopher Bona, a spokesman for Deerfield, Illinois-based
Baxter. GlaxoSmithKline Plc, based in London, has had conversations with
WHO's flu division that's responsible for distributing flu virus samples to
drugmakers, said Deborah Alspach, a spokeswoman.
Other companies that make flu vaccine include Novartis AG, of Basel,
Switzerland, and Sanofi-Aventis SA, of Paris.

Roche's Tamiflu

Roche Holding AG, of Basel, has an ample supply of Tamiflu, which
can reduce the symptoms of swine flu. Roche has donated a "Rapid Response
Stockpile" of 5 million treatment courses to the WHO that's on 24-hour
stand-by to be sent around the world, said Terence Hurley, a spokesman for
the company. No request has been made to deploy the stockpile, he said in an
email.

Glaxo also has ample supplies of its inhaled Relenza antiviral,
which also appears to be effective against the swine flu in CDC tests,
Alspach said.
The virus has already evaded the first line of defense that health
officials had hoped to use against a pandemic. International flu experts
preparing for a pandemic had planned to contain the initial outbreak of a
new, lethal strain of flu. The swine flu virus has already spread so far in
Mexico and the U.S. that the containment strategy is out of the question,
said Anne Schuchat, interim deputy director for science and public health
programs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the
Atlanta-based U.S. agency.
"We don't think we can contain the spread of this virus," she said
yesterday in a conference call with reporters.

To contact the reporter on this story: John Lauerman in Boston at
jlauerman@bloomberg.net; Jason Gale in Singapore at .gale@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: April 26, 2009 04:27 EDT

20 to 40 MILLION DIED IN A MUCH LESS LETHAL FLU, 1918 SPANISH FLU
2.5 out of 100 sick died. This one has 7 dying out of 100 infected
See: http://virus.stanford.edu/uda/

SO PRINT OUT YOUR KIDS' RELIGIOUS EXEMPTION LETTER -- HERE IS THE FORM:
http://www.vaccineinfo.net/exemptions/relexemptletterlaw.shtml
HAVE IT READY TO GO! COPS COME WITH NEEDLE it's BY THE FRONT DOOR!

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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aD0VK0_oNmw4&refer=home

Patricia A. Doyle DVM, PhD Bus Admin, Tropical Agricultural
Economics
Univ of West Indies Please visit my "Emerging Diseases" message
board at: http://www.emergingdisease.org/phpbb/index.php
Also my new website: http://drpdoyle.tripod.com/

READ the BIG FILE ON AVOIDING VACCINATIONS

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