They use the name “pox” to illicit a fear reaction because most people have been brainwashed that smallpox was defeated by vaccination.
— Roman Bystrianyk (@RBystrianyk) August 16, 2024
In 1914 Dr. C. Killick Millard wrote in The Vaccination Question:
“For forty years, corresponding roughly with the advent of the “sanitary…
They use the name “pox” to elicit a fear reaction because most people have been brainwashed that smallpox was defeated by vaccination.
In 1914 Dr. C. Killick Millard wrote in The Vaccination Question:
“For forty years, corresponding roughly with the advent of the “sanitary era,” smallpox has gradually but steadily been leaving this country (England). For the past ten years, the disease has ceased to have any appreciable effect upon our mortality statistics. For most of that period, it has been entirely absent except for a few isolated outbreaks here and there. It is reasonable to believe that with the perfecting and more general adoption of modern methods of control and with improved sanitation (using the term in the widest sense) smallpox will be completely banished from this country as has been the case with plague, cholera, and typhus fever. Accompanying this decline in smallpox there has been a notable diminution during the past decade in the amount of infantile vaccination. This falling off in vaccination is steadily increasing and is becoming very widespread.”
[Harry Bernhardt Anderson, State Medicine a Menace to Democracy, 1920, p. 84.]