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Thursday, February 12, 2015

Children Taken Away from Christian Parents to Receive Forced Vaccinations

The New York Times has published an opinion piece from a pro-vaccine doctor who earns millions of dollars in royalties from the sale of childhood vaccines. The title of the article is: “What Would Jesus Do About Measles?”
According to this medical doctor, Jesus would force everyone to vaccinate their children for the sake of the “greater good.” This pharmaceutical industry insider is calling on all states in the U.S. to remove the religious exemptions for vaccines that currently exist in 48 states.
Could the day come in the United States of America where parents who refuse to vaccinate their children will have their children removed from their home by force and injected with vaccines they do not approve of against their desire?
Yes. Not only could it happen, it already has happened.

Parents in Philadelphia Lost Custody of Their Children Who Were Forced to Receive the Measles Vaccine

In 1991, Philadelphia had a measles outbreak that reportedly infected 1400 people. Nine children reportedly died during this time, and seven of them reportedly were from two “fundamentalist Christian churches” where most members did not vaccinate their children. So during the media frenzy surrounding the measles and the MMR combo vaccine that includes measles, much like we are seeing today over the Disney outbreak in California, public health officials stepped in and convinced a court to allow them to take the children from their parents and force them to be vaccinated:
Public health officials turned to the courts to intervene. First, they got a court order to examine the churches’ children in their homes, then to admit children to the hospital for medical care. Finally, they did something that had never been done before or since: They got a court order to vaccinate children against their parents’ will. Children were briefly made wards of the state, vaccinated and returned to their parents. At the time, a religious exemption to vaccination had been on the books in Pennsylvania for about a decade. [1]
As is the case today, not everyone who came down with the measles in 1991 was unvaccinated. Some of the cases occurred among those fully vaccinated as well. The vaccine is not a 100% guarantee that it will prevent the measles, and there are documented cases showing that the measles vaccine itself can “shed” and cause measles among those fully vaccinated. (See: Dr. Suzanne Humphries, M.D. – Vaccine Strain of Measles Virus Found in Measles Outbreaks.)
In reading the accounts of the 1991 measles outbreak in Philadelphia, much is written about how certain church members did not treat their children after they became infected with the measles. There are also reports of pre-existing health conditions among the children who died.
The opinion piece in the New York Times this week mentions how the ACLU allegedly refused to get involved with the civil rights issue involved in taking children away from their parents and forcing them to become vaccinated. However, the whole story is not reported.
The New York Times itself reported back in 1991 that BOTH city officials and the ACLU complained about the judge’s order which went way beyond even what city health officials had requested. Here is a quote:
But the order, written by Judge Edward Summers on Monday and made public today, went far beyond the scope of the city’s request. The order also requires all families in the Faith Tabernacle Congregation in North Philadelphia to notify the city whenever a child misses three days of school and to have public-health doctors examine preschool children once a month, even after immunization.
The judge also ordered the city to locate all other churches in the city that spurn medical care as an article of faith, but the order was vague on whether the city would have to impose the same reporting requirements on those other churches.
Lawyers for the city, saying they were surprised by the ruling, said they would proceed with the immunizations and would ask the court to reconsider all other provisions of the decision.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania called the extra requirements unconstitutional and said it would appeal to the Federal courts if the Family Court rejected the city’s request to reconsider the extra requirements. [2]
Apparently, this judge took a request from public health officials to look at a few families from two churches who had children with measles, and used that to issue an order that applied to ALL churches in Philadelphia.
- See more at: http://medicalkidnap.com/2015/02/12/children-taken-away-from-christian-parents-to-receive-forced-vaccinations/#sthash.tXAyqlyE.dpuf
The New York Times has published an opinion piece from a pro-vaccine doctor who earns millions of dollars in royalties from the sale of childhood vaccines. The title of the article is: “What Would Jesus Do About Measles?”
According to this medical doctor, Jesus would force everyone to vaccinate their children for the sake of the “greater good.” This pharmaceutical industry insider is calling on all states in the U.S. to remove the religious exemptions for vaccines that currently exist in 48 states.
Could the day come in the United States of America where parents who refuse to vaccinate their children will have their children removed from their home by force and injected with vaccines they do not approve of against their desire?
Yes. Not only could it happen, it already has happened.

Parents in Philadelphia Lost Custody of Their Children Who Were Forced to Receive the Measles Vaccine

In 1991, Philadelphia had a measles outbreak that reportedly infected 1400 people. Nine children reportedly died during this time, and seven of them reportedly were from two “fundamentalist Christian churches” where most members did not vaccinate their children. So during the media frenzy surrounding the measles and the MMR combo vaccine that includes measles, much like we are seeing today over the Disney outbreak in California, public health officials stepped in and convinced a court to allow them to take the children from their parents and force them to be vaccinated:
Public health officials turned to the courts to intervene. First, they got a court order to examine the churches’ children in their homes, then to admit children to the hospital for medical care. Finally, they did something that had never been done before or since: They got a court order to vaccinate children against their parents’ will. Children were briefly made wards of the state, vaccinated and returned to their parents. At the time, a religious exemption to vaccination had been on the books in Pennsylvania for about a decade. [1]
As is the case today, not everyone who came down with the measles in 1991 was unvaccinated. Some of the cases occurred among those fully vaccinated as well. The vaccine is not a 100% guarantee that it will prevent the measles, and there are documented cases showing that the measles vaccine itself can “shed” and cause measles among those fully vaccinated. (See: Dr. Suzanne Humphries, M.D. – Vaccine Strain of Measles Virus Found in Measles Outbreaks.)
In reading the accounts of the 1991 measles outbreak in Philadelphia, much is written about how certain church members did not treat their children after they became infected with the measles. There are also reports of pre-existing health conditions among the children who died.
The opinion piece in the New York Times this week mentions how the ACLU allegedly refused to get involved with the civil rights issue involved in taking children away from their parents and forcing them to become vaccinated. However, the whole story is not reported.
The New York Times itself reported back in 1991 that BOTH city officials and the ACLU complained about the judge’s order which went way beyond even what city health officials had requested. Here is a quote:
But the order, written by Judge Edward Summers on Monday and made public today, went far beyond the scope of the city’s request. The order also requires all families in the Faith Tabernacle Congregation in North Philadelphia to notify the city whenever a child misses three days of school and to have public-health doctors examine preschool children once a month, even after immunization.
The judge also ordered the city to locate all other churches in the city that spurn medical care as an article of faith, but the order was vague on whether the city would have to impose the same reporting requirements on those other churches.
Lawyers for the city, saying they were surprised by the ruling, said they would proceed with the immunizations and would ask the court to reconsider all other provisions of the decision.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Pennsylvania called the extra requirements unconstitutional and said it would appeal to the Federal courts if the Family Court rejected the city’s request to reconsider the extra requirements. [2]
Apparently, this judge took a request from public health officials to look at a few families from two churches who had children with measles, and used that to issue an order that applied to ALL churches in Philadelphia.
- See more at: http://medicalkidnap.com/2015/02/12/children-taken-away-from-christian-parents-to-receive-forced-vaccinations/#sthash.tXAyqlyE.dpuf

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