Anti-vaxxers lose minds after religious
exemption bill gets pushed through
by
Bernadette Hogan
&
Chris Perez
Original Article
Posted By: MissMolly,
6/14/2019 5:00:57 AM
“And these are the religious people?!”
The state Capitol turned into a chaotic scene Thursday as both houses of legislature — and eventually Gov. Cuomo — passed a bill that will end New York’s policy of allowing religious exemptions from vaccine requirements.
Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz, the bill’s sponsor, got cursed out and flat-out threatened at one point by opponents of the legislation after it got passed and sent to the Senate floor.
“We’ll be back for you Jeffrey!” shouted one man in Orthodox religious garb, who was fuming in the gallery with others, many of whom had children with them.
Reply 1 - Posted by:
LC Chihuahua 6/14/2019 6:49:00 AM (No. 97983)
I know of someone that is an anti-vaxxer. She has a son with physical and mental developmental problems. She is very afraid that these shots will hurt her child. There are quite a few people in her position as well. People are using these exemptions to opt out of the vaccines, but they are systematically being discontinued. There are documented cases of seeming normal children having these shots, and afterwards just shutdown. There have also been fatalities. Can you guess how many shots a newborn will have? The answer is over 70, and the number is growing. There are also questionable ingredients in these shots like heavy metals and fetal tissue. Probably other questionable things as well. Can easily see a certain percentage of newborns that do not react well to these shots.
Stuff like this has been investigated, stopped, and changed for far less. However, not in this case. Big-money and big-pharma is involved. Saw a 'poll' just a day or two ago claiming over 90% of people were OK with removing these exemptions. Doubt its true. Its just another poll telling people what to think.
Yeah, these people are upset. They cannot protect their children, and feel like they are being run over by the process that allows them to voice their concerns..
13 people like this.
Where did these politicians get the idea that being religious means rolling over and playing dead? Religious people get angry, feel pushed to the limit and strike back, just like non religious people. Stupid pols. They simply don’t understand they can’t use our convictions as a stick to beat us into submission.
That said, vaccinations stop plagues. Simple as that. If you refuse to vaccinate yourself or your child, keep them out of the public. A vaccination shot may harm a child but a whooping cough or measles outbreak can kill thousands.
7 people like this.
Reply 3 - Posted by:
Calamity Kate 6/14/2019 7:38:22 AM (No. 98009)
I am NOT an anti-vaxxer, but I am against the government telling me what I MUST inject into my child. My daughter has hit 10 and already I'm getting auto-calls from her pediatrician's office to 'remind me' that the HPV vaccine is due. Well, h-e-double hockey sticks no. HPV is a life-style disease, not a sneeze-disease. The government has NO right to mandate this.
16 people like this.
What none of these politicians will admit is that the measles outbreak they use to justify this law is their fault. It did not happen because parents did not vaccinate their kids (although I think that they SHOULD vaccinate their kids). It happened because these politicians, among many others, encouraged people to come to the U.S,. in violation of U.S. laws, without being screened for measles (or any other contagious disease).
12 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
Chuzzles 6/14/2019 10:16:23 AM (No. 98137)
So, another liberal secular who thinks religious means being a doormat. If he would read his Bible, he would find that the conservative Sanhedrin council was who the main persecutors of Jesus consisted of. And it was a young Jewish lawyer named Saul who became one of the greatest advocates of God after the crucifixion too. His name was changed from Saul to Paul. That is about as hardcore religious as one can get. Then there are the Jesuits and the Templars. Both the warrior arms of the Vatican.
2 people like this.
Reply 6 - Posted by:
ZeldaFitzg 6/14/2019 10:45:20 AM (No. 98166)
When I was growing up, we all had measles (not German), chicken pox, and mumps. Yes, we fevered, itched, and ached. My children had measles and chicken pox, even though I got them all vaccinations available, and they cried and fussed through the afternoon and evening after every one. We were grateful they wouldn't have polio, diphtheria, or tetanus.
I understand what #2 is saying, and have had some experience, very sadly, in that area. I am therefore cautious and do wish that there weren't so many vaccinations given at the same time, and I wish they weren't so widely space. I am not against them.
These days I am dogged at every turn to get flu and pneumonia shots. At every doctor's visit they ask. Now they have added shingles and tetanus shots to the list. My doctor just yesterday added all four in the "visit summary" that he prepared on his computer as I talked to him. The day before, my insurance company had a nurse call me "just checking in," and I stupidly balked at the shingles shot, sharing with her my understanding that the shingles shot will not guarantee that I won't get shingles (which I painfully have had numerous times). She persisted that the shot would not only prevent shingles, but that **if I got the shingles** the case would be milder than it would have been. (Apparently she had not thought that statement through).
1 person likes this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
ZeldaFitzg 6/14/2019 10:47:33 AM (No. 98169)
Rats---I wish we had an editing feature, just for a few minutes. I meant to say that I wish the vaccinations WERE more widely spaced.
2 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
ZeldaFitzg 6/14/2019 10:51:20 AM (No. 98173)
Rats again----now I see a period misplaced.
2 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
Smart11344 6/14/2019 1:43:49 PM (No. 98304)
Could I be wrong? I firmly believe America is headed for many diseases that were once eradicated that have now been re-introdced by the third world countries invading the U.S.A. This truly is the the fault of non thinking democrats. Remember when people's homes had qurantine signs posted on them for deadly, contagious diseases? It's comning back. Thank you, you fllthy democrats.
1 person likes this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
Catherine 6/14/2019 5:28:16 PM (No. 98393)
Measles, tetanus, mumps, whooping cough, these immunizations have been around for decades, as has polio. They work. But I would chop off the hand of anyone wanting to give my newborn, fresh from the womb, a hepatitis shot. And this HPV stuff actually only affects a tiny minority. My dr put me on Invocana for diabetes. It worked for a while but then stopped so he took me off of it. While on Invocana, I became unsteady and stumbled a lot. I attributed it to age and other factors. About 10 days after getting off Invocana, I stopped stumbling and my balance returned. No one ever told me about this side effect. It's all about money. Drs no long practice real medicine, they are the arm of pharmaceutical companies who are pushing drugs that for the most part cause more suffering than they fix. We should never, ever, let the government tell us we must immunize our babies. Ever.
1 person likes this.
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