Infant vaccines can deplete vitamin C by raising
blood histamine levels and then the endothelial cells lining the
inside of the blood vessels become separated from one another.
Infection or the stress of a cold can also halve the blood
levels of vitamin C in just a matter of 24 hours. Dr. Clemetson
said,
"It has been shown that the toxins or toxoids of the usual
inoculants (vaccines) cause increased blood histamine
levels in animals. . . It will be possible to study the protective
effects of vitamin C in reducing histaminemia.
Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) aids the conversion of histamine
to hydanton-5-acetic acid for elimination and has
been shown to protect against the toxicity of inoculations,
both in animals and humans. Even some soldiers
going to the Gulf War suffered severe reactions to some
of their inoculations, so this matter is of concern to the
armed forces as well as the rest of us. . . we are defective
mammals, lacking fur and lacking the ability to
make our own vitamin C. We take great care to provide
ourselves with clothes and housing to make up for our
lack of fur, but we do not always take enough care to
make up for our inborn error of metabolism. It is odd
that medical schools, which teach so much about DNA
and the genetic code, do not pay more attention to
teaching nutrition and about a major human genetic defect
shared by us all."
Mercury, copper and other heavy metals in the vaccines
are also shown to raise blood histamine levels. Subperiosteal
hemorrhages (the capillary fragility in the covering
of the bone) can lift the periosteum right off the growing bone
and be the cause of spontaneous fractures (think race horses).
Dr. Clemetson goes on to point out that C deficiency also impairs
the ability of the amino acids lysine and proline to form
collagen and the foundation for fibrous tissue, bone, cartilage
and tooth dentin. In a case where the parents were accused of
murder of their young infant, based on the bruising, fractures,
etc. revealed in autopsy, it was found that the baby had been
premature. The mother said she was too sick to take her vitamins,
and actually lost weight during the pregnancy. This premature,
malnourished baby was then vaccinated at 8 weeks
with oral polio, DPT, influenza B, and hepatitis B. The baby
developed a high pitched cry and a fever of 105, and after respiratory
arrest at home 2 days later, died at the hospital at age
10 weeks.
But what to do when confronted by an event or barn
or school that requires vaccinations we choose not to give?
For schools, simply turn over the registration form; most have
an area in very small print, where you can state either religious
or philosophical differences. For events/barns/counties,
education is the key here; remember, vaccines are
“Colorable” laws and therefore changeable.
In either instance, you also, of course, have the
choice of not attending. Home schooling has become very
popular in recent years and has also been shown to be even
more effective than crowded public schools where teachers
have little control over students. And in our opinion, no
boarding facility or event is worth taking a chance on our animals’
long-term health.
The insistence of these groups on vaccination has
never ceased to amaze me. One would think that they are
afraid their vaccinated members might “catch” something
from the “unprotected” member. Of course, following this
line of thought out logically, that would indicate they are concerned
that the vaccines don’t work. Perhaps they are correct.
We heard of one distributor, a national campaigner, who sold
a mare across country. The mare arrived whole and hearty, but
the new owners became enraged when they discovered no
vaccine history. Before they could get a vet out to “shoot” her
up, the whole barn came down with strangles for which they
had all been vaccinated. Guess who the sole healthy horse
was? Yep, the unvaccinated mare! And stories like this
abound within the unvaccinated community.
We must each learn to question rather than tojust blindly accept “popular” or “common” advise
After all,
doctors are human like the rest of us and many simply do not
have the time to read even their own Journals let alone do research
into areas which may seem bizarre in light of their education.
Rather than heaping the responsibility for our own
and our animals’ health on someone else, let us each take
more personal responsibility, do our own research, come to
our own conclusions and perhaps even share those conclusions
with our health practitioners
2 comments:
This is a very useful post about athe horse allergies. your post will really help me when I will find find scratches in horses and that might be the best treatment.
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