(A.K.A. Non-Original Rants)

–Co-opting good stuff from all over the ‘Net and maybe some original thoughts—ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒE

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Saturday Meme Drop

Please note there are two versions of the same meme. The second part on the second version caused some issues and accusations of spreading misinformation. I trust y’all to figure it out for yourselves–I originally removed it but I’m not a Democrat and you can do your own research. In my opinion and from my research, there isn’t proof that vaccines are poison, per se although they do cause adverse reactions similarly. There is some connection between some live-virus vaccines and a deadly form of eczema (https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/vaccines-eczema-questions#vaccines-and-eczema-flares). I do agree that most Doctors can’t tell you a single vaccine ingredient. And, per the article, vaccines can cause an eczema flareup. So there it is.



19 responses to “Saturday Meme Drop”

  1. I never pictured Tyson fishing. Now every time I go (always a Bass angler) I’ll not be able to NOT picture him. Not that he was FISHING in the meme…

    And totally tangential but mandated…. Fishing for “bath” in a bath tub can only be a thing for Mike?

    I believe we call that “Bassin in Lake “O” here in Florida. 😉

    Digression… a fine art when well practiced.

    Great bunch today.

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  2. #9:
    Remember,…Doctors were also debating about the safety and efficacy of Penicillin back then too.
    Both Vaccines and Penicillin have saves more lives than all other drugs combines.

    But don’t let facts get in the way of your delusions.

    (Besides, read what the top text says, it isn’t anti-vaccine, it is precautions for people with eczema…It has nothing to do with “Internal poisoning” or anything else in the text at the bottom.
    The whole meme is a lie.
    Most anti-vaccine claims are.

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  3. PS: Your smarter that than, act like it.

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  4. B must be for “Boosted”

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  5. K9: If you knew me you’d know better

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  6. TOP NOTCH TYSON SARCASM !
    NOTHING LIKE THE MIDWEST FOR HUMOR.
    THANKS.
    blueray

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  7. boneman–I liked that one too. And thanks!

    B–I researched that one and there are studies that back up the first one although there is nothing contraindicated on the CDCs website. The second part, while histrionic, does jibe with the idea that vaccines are actually poisonous, which is why they cause fevers, seizures (1 in 3000 or 4000), etc. Not a delusion and is the product of research. As I’ve asked others, please refrain from personal commentary to myself or other commentors.

    K9–No personal comments, please just address what others have written.

    blueray–Thanks! That one was hilarious. Appreciate the comment and you’re welcome!

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  8. Agree with B. Back then, they thought stomach ulcers came from extra acid caused by stress – and any number of other things that are known to be nonsense, today. It MAY be true that some of today’s vaccines aren’t as safe as claimed, but the nonsense in #9 is of no use whatsoever.

    If the way you deal with someone spreading false information is to go out and spread different false information, you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the problem.

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  9. Thos–I’m pretty cynical about anything after what we learned over the past five years. I’ve revised the meme since the first part is true. That said, I don’t think the unaltered version would be ‘misinformation’. Extreme, yes, but it seems that the conspiracy folks are running ahead. And I think my readers will decide for themselves what they think is true. I’m not a Democrat.

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  10. It’s not so much that vaccines are poison. Individually they’re not. It’s that (1) they’ve mixed so many together, are giving so many so young and (3) probably the other chemicals used to keep them from inhibiting each other in the mixes.

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    1. clayusmcret–At this point in time, I think that, with the proliferation of vaccines (or shots now masquerading as vaccines) given to children, the cumulative effect could be considered poisonous. This takes out known manufacturing issues.

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  11. Seems “b”

    missed her rabies shot

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  12. MWC, I would have Liked your comment but it never lets me.

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  13. jk–B is a guy. I get your point about the tone, notwithstanding, I’m reminding everyone that they need to address the comments and not the commentor.

    clay–Thanks for the thought and don’t know what’s up with that.

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  14. MW

    Recently found you ( Cederq maybe? 🤔)

    Apologies offered.
    Just my sense of “ humor”,
    hence, the Handle.
    I quite like your site. Last week I made it a daily read.

    G-d’s best to all.

    JK

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    1. jk–No worries at all–just trying to keep things friendly! I’m honored that you’ve made the blog a daily read! Best to you!

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  15. Ms. Chick: particularly, eczema vaccination is an occasional (and horrific) intersection of SMALLPOX vaccine, and eczema.

    Thought experiment: in 2025, how many vaccinations against smallpox does any child receive?

    ZERO.

    Now, I agree that the covid “vaccine” was a cluster-…er, “hug”, unparalleled in recent history, that does not mean that vaccinations against measles, and others, are illegitimate.

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  16. Reltney–You probably know more about it than I do from quick research, however it’s any live vaccine. There may be some vaccinations that are not illegitimate, however, the timing and quantity, I would argue, are problematic. As is the fact that further research on side effects essentially ceased

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    1. Ma’am: research- good. Research ref (timing)(quantity), in my view, is certainly a righteous series of questions to ask.

      Ref “live” vaccines: eczema vaccinatum, as a particular problem, appears to be specific to smallpox vaccine.

      As an interesting (well, interesting to *me*!) aside, smallpox vaccination is based on a viral disease, used to be known informally as cowpox, from which we derive it:s formal name of vaccinia.

      Like

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