By Stuart Webb | WeaponizedNews.Com | Feb 3, 2015
I guess philosophical and religious views don’t seem to matter to Dr. Ben Carson, when it comes to mandatory vaccinations for certain diseases. Carson, who also happens to be a presidential hopeful for the Republican nomination in 2016, said to The Hill “Although I strongly believe in individual rights and the rights of parents to raise their children as they see fit, I also recognize that public health and public safety are extremely important in our society,” Carson continued “Certain communicable diseases have been largely eradicated by immunization policies in this country and we should not allow those diseases to return by foregoing safe immunization programs, for philosophical, religious or other reasons when we have the means to eradicate them”.
So to be clear, Dr. Carson, you strongly believe in individual rights but you also strongly believe that the individual should not have individual rights? That seems to be a bit of an oxymoron, wouldn’t you say? Citing public health doesn’t make forced inoculation acceptable. So I guess when Barack Obama acts like a dictator, using executive orders to replace legitimate legislation, bypassing Congress on an array of issues, it is all fine and dandy because the President says he believes in checks and balances.
Forced relationships don’t produce quality relationships. Forced purchasing of healthcare doesn’t provide quality healthcare. Forced inoculation doesn’t provide quality inoculation. None represent Freedom. Vaccine technology absolutely exists, but the interests behind mass vaccinations do not have good intent. Healthcare is a huge industry and has an interest in the population being sick and unhealthy. Even The Huffington Post admits this years flu shot doesn’t even protect against the most dominant and deadly strain “CDC officials think the vaccine should provide some protection and still are urging people to get vaccinated. But it probably won’t be as good as if the vaccine strain was a match. Flu vaccine effectiveness tends to vary from year to year. Last winter, flu vaccine was 50 to 55 percent effective overall, which experts consider relatively good.”
I never get the flu shot, and I never get the flu. If the effectiveness of the flu shot depends on guessing, this is a problem, and if the establishment is pushing forced inoculation without any tolerance of opposing opinions, we should at the very least be skeptical at the motives behind this narrative of forced immunizations. Are we still a free country if the government can mandate injecting a substance into your body? I think not.