Doormat said:
[A]re YOU going to get the Gardasil vaccine? If not, why not?
No, I won't. It is only licensed here for girls over 9 years and young women under 26 for the prevention of cervical cancer. I am not female, in that age group, and I have no cervix.
You are mistaken and apparently don't understand the vaccine is for males, too. The Gardasil vaccine is licensed in the U.K. for boys age 9-15. Furthermore, in the U.K. you can receive the vaccine off-label at the doctors discretion. Here is
the link for Fleet Street clinic in London.
Now will you attempt to get the vaccine? If not, why not? Remember, you believe the vaccine is safe and herd immunity is allegedly important to vaccination programs. Prove your faith in this vaccination.
Doormat said:
1. Do you concede the "placebo" in 9 of the 10 study groups was not a placebo because it contained aluminum adjuvant? If not, explain why.
No. Since it was testing the novel part of the vaccine. The adjuvant has been tested elsewhere, and changing the adjuvant would spoil the trial of the active part, which was the purpose of the trial.
First, you cannot change the definition of placebo. Second, you haven't provided any evidence that aluminum adjuvants have been tested for safety in clinical trials (they haven't been). I expect either a concession from you or a rational refutation.
Doormat said:
2. Do you concede the alleged saline "placebo" in the remaining study was also not a placebo because it was not normal saline but the vaccine carrier solution that contains 9.56 mg of sodium chloride, 0.78 mg of L-histidine, 50 mcg of polysorbate 80 and 35 mcg of sodium borate? If not, explain why.
What was the purpose of the salts? All placebo injections will need to be balanced for salts if they are to avoid inbalances. (The body is salty y'know!) I am not qualified to determine whether that was a poor placebo or not, but I suspect it was fine.
Injectable normal saline is 0.9%, and that would have been an acceptable placebo. You haven't provided any reason to include the other ingredients in the carrier solution. I have already shown that one of the ingredients, polysorbate 80, was found to cause infertility in rates. The carrier solution was not a placebo based on the definition of placebo.
Doormat said:
1. You fail to distinguish between ingested aluminum and injected aluminum adjuvants.
Because the toxicity that you refer to is a systemic one. It doesn't really matter what the source of entry is. See
here and
here, for example.
The link you posted states the following: "The calculated body burden of aluminum from vaccinations exceeds that from dietary sources..."
Sorry for the table formatting. Note that Gardasil (225 μg) supplies less than twice the Al than morning bowl of Cornflakes (120 μg from a 30 g serving.)
Supra. And the table you provided is erroneous. For example, the Hib vaccine contains aluminum adjuvant yet your table lists it as having none.
Doormat said:
3. You fail to recognize that aluminum adjuvants are added to vaccines to enhance the recipient's immune response to the vaccine antigen.
How'd you comclude that? What else could they be they added for?
Please Google adjuvants and educate yourself. Don't waste my time.
Doormat said:
4. You fail to recognize that aluminum is an antigen.
Irrelevant to the discussion.
Rather, it's quite relevant to the discussion and my point about placebo. Don't wast my time.
Doormat said:
I suggest you find and watch Dr. Chris Exley’s lecture on aluminum in vaccines. He is an expert on the toxicology of aluminum.
His conclusions are not universally accepted by toxicologists, and some are rejected.
Provide evidence for your claim.
From that interview:
Could you clarify the content and context of the statements that you made at the 4th International Public Conference on Vaccination in October 2009, which have been so widely read and misquoted? Specifically the reported quote, "The rate of serious adverse effects is greater than the incidence rate of cervical cancer."
"The rate of serious adverse events reported is 3.4/100,000 doses distributed. The current incidence rate of cervical cancer in the United States is 7/100,000 women. This is what I said." |
Seems like you have misquoted her, earlier in the thread, misrepresenting what she meant. She is quite clear that you shouldn't draw conclusions from the adverse event reports.
The quote was directly from ABC News. She was not misquoted and if you read more carefully that is what she meant. The vaccine is three doses. 100,000 women will receive a total of 300,000 doses. In other words, 7/100,000 women will get cervical cancer and 10.2/100,000 women will have serious adverse reactions. Why did you not underline
doses distributed as the article had it? Don't waste my time.
She seems to be commenting almost entirely about the need for informed choices and about the [obvious] lack of long term efficacy evidence. Which claims do you refer to specifically?
The claims that prove the vaccine could hardly be called beneficial. Read the article more carefully.
So, which childhood vaccination programs do you support?
You will have to do a better job of responding to my argument, and stop wasting my time, if you want me to go down that rabbit trail with you. And you will have to start your own thread on the topic instead of trying to derail this one with your nonsense.