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The speaker claims the U.S. is managing its measles epidemic better than other countries, citing approximately 842 cases compared to Canada's similar number with one-eighth the population, and Europe's ten times higher figure. The speaker states that U.S. measles cases have plateaued. The speaker identifies the Mennonite population in Texas as particularly afflicted due to religious objections to the MMR vaccine, which they believe contains aborted fetus debris and DNA particles. The speaker criticizes the CDC's focus on vaccination as the sole solution, asserting that various treatments exist for those who contract measles. The speaker advocates for compassionate treatment and the development of effective treatment protocols, which they claim the CDC is currently working on.

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Less than 1% of the public consists of unvaccinated children. The Amish community is a prime example of a large group with low vaccination rates. It is extremely rare to find autistic, ADD, autoimmune disease, PANDAS, or epilepsy cases among the Amish. The U.S. Government has been studying the Amish for years but has not released any reports to the public. This is likely because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. The CDC would be implicated in harming the public for decades if such a report were published.

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Many unvaccinated people are parents who followed recommendations blindly. Less than 1% of the public is unvaccinated. The Amish community is largely unvaccinated, yet there are very few cases of autism, ADD, autoimmune diseases, and other chronic illnesses. The US government has studied the Amish for years but has not released any reports because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. This suggests that the CDC has been withholding data that shows their recommendations may harm the public.

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The speaker claims the U.S. is managing its measles epidemic better than other countries, citing approximately 842 cases compared to Canada's similar number with one-eighth the population, and Europe's ten times higher figures. The speaker notes that the rate of measles growth in the U.S. has plateaued. They attribute a high affliction rate among Mennonites in Texas to religious objections to the MMR vaccine, due to its alleged content of aborted fetus debris and DNA particles. The speaker criticizes the CDC's focus solely on vaccination, asserting that treatments exist for measles. They advocate for compassionate treatment and the development of treatment protocols, which they claim the CDC is currently working on.

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Jack Ferguson has leukemia, and his family's situation has sparked debate over vaccine policies. His parents, Austin and his wife, are unvaccinated against COVID-19. After receiving a notice from Ronald McDonald House requiring vaccinations for all guests, Austin confronted the staff, expressing his strong feelings about the policy. Ronald McDonald House, which provides accommodation for sick children and their families, stated they would assist the family in finding alternative housing, emphasizing the need to protect vulnerable populations. Austin explained his stance against vaccination, citing personal beliefs and interpretations of the Bible regarding government authority. Ultimately, the family has decided to leave Ronald McDonald House rather than get vaccinated, supported by over $150,000 raised through fundraising efforts.

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A couple recounts their six-year-old daughter Kaylee's death from measles-related pneumonia. All four of their children contracted measles, but Kaylee's case worsened, leading to pneumonia in her left lung. Despite seeking medical help, she died in the ICU after being sedated and intubated. The parents say that their other children contracted measles after Kaylee passed away. They were treated by Dr. Ben Edwards and recovered quickly. The parents express that they would still choose measles over the MMR vaccine and believe measles can be beneficial for building the immune system. They feel the media is exaggerating the dangers of measles. The parents say that their other children miss Kaylee. They request prayers and believe God wanted this to happen to awaken people and bring them closer to Him.

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Less than 1% of the public is unvaccinated. The Amish community is largely unvaccinated, yet there are very few cases of autism, ADD, autoimmune disease, panda pans, or epilepsy among them. The US government has studied the Amish for years but has not released any reports to the public because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. This would contradict the CDC's narrative and expose their harm to the public.

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Many children and people are unvaccinated, but it's a small percentage as most of us blindly follow vaccination recommendations. The Amish community is a large group that is largely unvaccinated, yet it's very rare to find an autistic or chronically ill child among them. The US government has been studying the Amish for decades, but there's no public report because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. This would expose the CDC's harm to the public for years without disclosure.

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Unvaccinated populations are hesitant due to past issues with the DTP vaccine causing severe injuries or death in children. Bill Gates claimed it saved lives in Africa, but Danish studies revealed vaccinated girls were dying at a higher rate from unrelated illnesses due to weakened immune systems. The vaccine protected against diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis but left them vulnerable to other diseases.

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Speaker: Noted claims about the Amish and COVID. - The speaker traveled to Lancaster County, Amish country, visiting the house of a relative of Gideon King, described as the one person, the only known person in the Amish community who supposedly died from COVID. They say there may be up to five people, but the names of five people were not provided. A $2,500 reward on Twitter was offered for names of more than five people in Lancaster County who died from COVID; no one could name more than one person, and they all named Gideon King. - The speaker visited the house of Sam King, a relative of Gideon King. Sam said he doesn’t know if Gideon actually died from COVID. They think Gideon died in the hospital. - If there were five Amish people who died, this would mean the Amish death rate was 90 times lower than the infection fatality rate of the United States. - The explanation offered: this is possible because the Amish aren’t vaccinated and didn’t follow a single guideline of the CDC. They did not lockdown, did not mask, did not social distance, did not vaccinate, and there were no mandates to get vaccinated in the Amish community. - The speaker asserts there are no autistic kids in the Amish community, claiming it is very rare to find kids with ADD, autoimmune disease, PANDA, PANS, epilepsy, or other chronic diseases. - The speaker states the US government has studied the Amish for decades, but there has never been a report released to the public. The stated reason is that such a report would show that not following guidelines leads to better health. - The speaker concludes there is no public report after decades of study because it would be devastating to the narrative and would show that the CDC has been harming the public for decades.

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In this video, the speaker discusses the Amish community's response to COVID-19. They mention visiting Lancaster County and trying to find more information about the reported deaths. Only one person, Gideon King, was known to have died from COVID-19, and the speaker couldn't find any other names despite offering a reward. The speaker then highlights that even if there were five Amish deaths, their mortality rate was 90 times lower than the national average. This is attributed to the Amish community not following CDC guidelines, such as lockdowns, masks, social distancing, and vaccinations. The speaker suggests that Pennsylvania should consider following the Amish's approach in future pandemics instead of relying on WHO guidance.

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Caleb Pollock got the COVID vaccine due to fear and mandates. After receiving the Moderna booster, she became paralyzed. Doctors initially dismissed her symptoms, but a second doctor found a lesion on her spine likely caused by the vaccine. She was offered medical assisted suicide in rehab. The mainstream media reports on a measles outbreak due to missed vaccinations during the pandemic. A fundraiser for a service dog has been launched for Caleb.

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Only about 1% of the population is unvaccinated, with the Amish being a notable example. In the Amish community, it is extremely rare to find unvaccinated children with conditions like autism, ADD, autoimmune disease, pandapans, or epilepsy. The US government has been studying the Amish for years, but no public reports have been released. It is believed that these reports would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. The lack of reports suggests that the CDC has been withholding data and potentially harming the public.

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Laura Logan hosts a discussion with Dr. Sherri Tenpenny on vaccines, public health policy, and what they see as failures and harms within the system. The conversation weaves together personal history, policy details, scientific debates, and broader social concerns, intercut with promotional content for GiveSendGo. Key points and claims raised by Dr. Tenpenny - Vaccine ingredients and aluminum exposure: Tenpenny asserts that if someone receives every vaccine on the schedule, they would be injected with a total of about twelve thousand micrograms of aluminum, which she says is inflammatory to every organ system and can be stored in bones (60% of aluminum exposure). She notes aluminum is present in vaccines in order to replace mercury, which she describes as also a poison. - Early vaccine industry liability and the 1986 Act: The discussion explains that prior to 1986 there were liability concerns for vaccine makers due to injury lawsuits. Tenpenny recounts that in 1986 Congress passed a law giving the pharmaceutical industry liability immunity for vaccines, creating what she describes as a ramp in the vaccine schedule. She cites that by 1991 additional vaccines were introduced (Hep B at birth, Hib, chickenpox, Prevnar, Gardasil, Hep A, and more) and alleges this resulted in a rising autism incidence aligned with new vaccines. - The vaccine injury system: Tenpenny explains the Injury Compensation Act and the existence of VAERS as a tracking system, along with a separate pathway created under the PREP Act (the Preparedness and Readiness Act). She states that during the COVID era a separate program, the Covered Countermeasure Program (CICP), existed under the PREP Act, but it had no funding and a one-year statute of limitations, leading to under-compensation and very few adjudicated cases; she contrasts this with the earlier 1986 act, which funded vaccine injury compensation through the Federal Court of Claims and VAERS. - Perceived safety and effectiveness concerns: The speakers discuss studies suggesting that the flu shot might not prevent flu and that some studies indicate vaccines including pneumonia vaccines may be associated with higher risk of the conditions they aim to prevent. Tenpenny frames this as evidence of cracks in the vaccine program and argues that vaccines are linked to a broad spectrum of health issues, including autoimmune diseases, infertility, and cancers, which she says have been increasing. - Pediatric vaccination schedule and “pediatric poisoning program”: Tenpenny asserts that infants receive multiple injections early in life, with claims that by age two they will have thousands of micrograms of aluminum and other compounds that remain in the body, including in the brain. She characterizes the pediatric schedule as a systematic poisoning program for children and a parallel “adult assault program” for adults receiving vaccines. - COVID-19 vaccine controversy and health impacts: The conversation covers the COVID vaccines, including assertions about adverse effects such as myocarditis, strokes, kidney injury, autoimmune diseases, neurological issues, and cancers. Tenpenny describes long-term concerns (long COVID, autoimmune diseases) and claims of widespread injury and death, contending that the pandemic revealed how the health-care and pharmaceutical systems operate, including alleged corruption and profit motives. She discusses the difficult experiences of families during the pandemic, including restrictions on care and the use of alternate treatments like ivermectin in some cases. - The claim that COVID vaccines were not properly evaluated and that mandated vaccination reflected coercion: The speakers discuss mandates and the experiences of individuals in workplaces and educational institutions who faced pressure to receive vaccines, including religious exemptions and disputes about mandates. Tenpenny suggests a broader pattern of overreach in public health policy and questions about the balance between individual rights and mandates. - History and philosophy of public health programs: They discuss the Healthy People initiatives, arguing that the program’s goals have expanded in scope (from 15 goals to 1,200 for Healthy People 2030) and that the expansion is associated with greater surveillance and control over personal lives. Tenpenny claims that this is part of a broader trend toward data collection and governance of individual health and behavior. - The economics and incentives around vaccines: The conversation notes how physicians are compensated in part through vaccine administration, implying financial incentives influence clinical decisions. Tenpenny emphasizes the profit motive behind vaccines and the pharmaceutical industry’s financial interests, citing extreme examples like the one boy in a photo who allegedly became heavily medicated due to vaccines. - The role of media and information control: They discuss the influence of advertising in media since the 1990s and the difficulty of reporting critically on vaccines when major advertisers are pharmaceutical companies. They also mention AI and misinformation concerns, including examples of AI fabricating sources and the need to verify information. - Personal stakes, accountability, and political possibilities: Tenpenny discusses personal cost for challenging the vaccine paradigm, including an earlier period of potential licensing scrutiny and professional pushback. She names figures such as Fauci and Birx, argues that accountability has not yet occurred, and expresses hope that public interest in accountability could shift through advocacy and political leadership, citing RFK Jr. as a potential ally though acknowledging political and institutional obstacles. - Treatment and detoxification approaches: For those who have already received vaccines, Tenpenny outlines two separate tracks: detoxification for childhood vaccines and detox for COVID vaccines. For detox, she mentions products such as PureBody Extra (PBX), a zeolite-based supplement she says helps remove metals like aluminum and mercury from the body. She notes it is usable across age groups and even for pets, and she personally uses it. She also discusses non-specific detox approaches such as vitamin D optimization, lymphatic stimulation, exercise, and a diet focusing on avoiding white foods and reducing inflammation. She cautions that there is no proven blood or urine test to quantify spike protein after a COVID vaccine, and that detox strategies aim to support overall health rather than remove embedded spike protein from tissues. - The role of faith and resilience: The interview includes discussions of faith as a guiding force for Tenpenny, including her personal journey toward Christian faith in 2020. They reflect on fear, hope, forgiveness, and the idea that one can act with integrity and do the right thing even when faced with controversy or personal cost. They discuss existential questions about meaning, purpose, and moral responsibility, including the belief that life has a spiritual dimension that informs how to respond to public-health challenges. - Community and parenting: The conversation emphasizes the importance of community networks for new parents, including seeking mentorship from experienced parents and trusted health advocates, and maintaining parental agency in decisions about vaccines, medical interventions, and child-rearing. They discuss the value of critical thinking, asking questions, and avoiding blind trust in professionals or institutions. - Closing notes and resources: Tenpenny provides her websites and a Substack for ongoing information, including dr10penny.com, dr10penny.substack.com, and 10pennywalkwithgod.substack.com, as well as her X profile busy doctor t. The episode closes with a call to viewers to stay informed and to seek second opinions, while thanking the audience for supporting independent journalism. Overall, the dialogue centers on a critical, conspiratorial framing of vaccines, public-health policy, and the medical establishment; it weaves together testimonies about personal experience, policy history (notably the 1986 Act and the PREP Act), alleged systemic failures in compensation for vaccine injuries, criticisms of COVID-19 responses and vaccine mandates, and practical detoxification and faith-based guidance. The promotional content for GiveSendGo lightly interrupts the core discussion, but the majority of the exchange remains an extended argument about vaccine safety, accountability, and the perceived influence of big pharma on health care and public policy.

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Vaccine skepticism in the U.S. leads to more deaths outside the U.S. than inside. In the U.S., measles may kill four per thousand children, while in other countries, it's more like two hundred per thousand due to lack of medical care and nutrition. Vaccine skepticism transfers and kills more children outside the U.S.

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People's trust in politicians and the health system was tested during the pandemic. However, the results were not as good as expected. Some conspiracy theories, including anti-vaxx beliefs, spread widely. Vaccine acceptance for diseases like measles may also be affected. Many people took the vaccines, but a significant minority believed in rare side effects and evil conspiracies surrounding the vaccines. Overall, there was a step backward in terms of vaccine acceptance and trust.

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How many people are completely unvaccinated? It's a small percentage, less than 1%. The Amish community is a notable example, as they largely remain unvaccinated and show very low instances of autism, ADD, autoimmune diseases, and epilepsy. Despite decades of study by the U.S. Government, no public reports have been released. This lack of information likely stems from the potential to undermine the narrative that following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. The absence of such reports suggests that the CDC may have been withholding data that could indicate that not following their recommendations could result in better health outcomes.

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Chris and I chose not to vaccinate, concerned about myocarditis. Our family faced tension over vaccination choices, especially after Rory's tragic incident. He got vaccinated and soon after reported discomfort. One night, he collapsed, and despite my efforts to reach him, he was gone. The health commissioner stated that the risks of the vaccine weren't clearly communicated, but it wasn't a breach of rights. Rory's death was linked to acute myocarditis from the vaccine. Many believe the vaccine is safe, and experts emphasize its effectiveness. However, there are concerns about the pressure to vaccinate, which some feel compromised their choices. Ultimately, the message remains that the vaccine is considered very safe.

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The current MMR vaccine contains millions of DNA fragments created from aborted fetal tissue, which some people object to on religious grounds. These individuals should be treated with compassion, especially in healthcare settings. One failure of the CDC is not informing doctors that no child should die of measles. Prior to the vaccine's introduction in 1963, there were 400 measles deaths annually out of up to two million cases. While the MMR vaccine doesn't contain fetal cells, it does contain DNA fragments from a fetal cell line originating from a 1960s abortion. Some people have religious objections to this. During a measles outbreak, some individuals felt like they were treated as pariahs in hospitals due to their religious beliefs. Everyone should have a choice and still be treated with respect, regardless of religious objections.

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Many unvaccinated children are found in the Amish community, where chronic diseases like autism, ADD, autoimmune diseases, and epilepsy are rare. The U.S. Government has studied the Amish for decades but has not released any reports to the public, likely because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. This suggests that the CDC may have been withholding data that shows their recommendations may harm the public.

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Only a small percentage of the population, less than 1%, is unvaccinated. The Amish community is largely unvaccinated and has very few cases of chronic diseases like autism, ADD, autoimmune diseases, and epilepsy. The US government has studied the Amish for years but has not released any reports because it would reveal that not following vaccination guidelines leads to better health outcomes. This suggests that the CDC may have been harming the public by promoting vaccinations.

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Only a small percentage of people, less than 1%, are totally unvaccinated. The Amish community is largely unvaccinated, and there are very few cases of autism, ADD, autoimmune diseases, pandapans, or epilepsy among them. The US government has studied the Amish for years but has not released any reports because it would contradict the narrative that following vaccination guidelines leads to better health. This suggests that the CDC may have been withholding data that shows harm caused by vaccines.

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Speaker 1 states that less than one percent of the public is totally unvaccinated. The Amish are given as an example of a largely unvaccinated group. Speaker 1 claims it is very rare to find an autistic child in the Amish community, and that ADD, autoimmune disease, PANDA PANS, and epilepsy are also rare. Speaker 1 asserts the U.S. government has studied the Amish for decades, but has not released a report. Speaker 1 believes the reason for this is that the report would show that not following government guidelines leads to better health outcomes. Speaker 1 concludes that the report would be devastating to the narrative and would show that the CDC has been harming the public for decades by burying data.

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First speaker: The question is about how many people are totally unvaccinated, and whether this is mainly among parents who stepped up. The claim is that it’s a very small percentage because many people blindly followed the vaccination recommendations for children. Second speaker: It’s less than one percent of the public who are unvaccinated. The Amish are given as a perfect example of a large group that is largely unvaccinated. The speaker asserts that you won’t find an autistic child who was unvaccinated, and that such chronic diseases as ADD, autoimmune diseases, PANDA/PANS, and epilepsy are very rare in the Amish community. The speaker claims that the US government has studied the Amish for decades, but there has never been a public report. The reason given is that such a report would show that not following the guidelines leads to healthier outcomes, and therefore there would be a disclosure that would be devastating to the narrative. According to the speaker, there is no public report because it would reveal that the CDC has been harming the public for decades and is bearing all the data privately.

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If your kids were young now, would you vaccinate them for measles and mumps? No, I had measles as a child, and it was common. In the early 1900s, about 10,000 Americans died from it, mostly malnourished children. Healthy kids rarely die from measles, and studies show childhood measles can lead to better health later on. Regarding Samoa, I didn't convince anyone not to vaccinate; the prime minister had already banned it after vaccine-related deaths. No one died from measles there; it was due to a bad vaccine. I still believe vaccines cause autism. A CDC study showed a 150% increased risk of autism in children who received the hepatitis B vaccine early. Many studies, which I reference in my book, link vaccines to neurological injuries. The CDC's claims against this are propaganda influenced by the pharmaceutical industry.
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