In France, President Manuel Macron is forcing all parents to vaccinate their kids with 11 potentially dangerous vaccines or face criminal charges. This, despite the associated health risks of these vaccines. Studies reveal the many health risks associated with MMR vaccine and flu shots.
MMR vaccine, in particular, could increase the risk of developing autism, autoimmune diseases, and neurological problems later in life according to a paper published in 2012 by Dr. Stephanie Seneff, Senior Research Scientist at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
France Makes 11 Provably Dangerous Vaccines Mandatory
Starting in 2018, parents in France will be committing a criminal offence if they fail to vaccinate their children with 11 dangerous vaccines.
Following in the footsteps of Italy’s draconian mandatory vaccination laws, French president Manuel Macron has decided to force children to receive the following shots: diphtheria, tetanus, polio, measles, hepatitis B, influenza, whooping cough, mumps, rubella, pneumonia, and meningitis C.
Collective-evolution.com reports: That’s right, France plans to make an influenza vaccine, otherwise known as a flu shot, mandatory for all children.
The government attributes this sudden regulation of such a strict regiment of vaccines to an “epidemic of measles in France.”
There have been more than 24,000 cases of measles in France between 2008 and 2016 (though only 10 of these cases resulted in death).
This change likely won’t be pushed through without a fight from the public. Last year, a survey sent to 65,819 individuals found that France was the most skeptical country in the world about vaccines.
An astonishing 41% of the participants in France disagreed with the statement “vaccines are safe,” in comparison to only 13% on average throughout the rest of the world (source).
Their concerns don’t come without good reason, as tons of studies have found correlations between specific vaccines and the ingredients within them to different illnesses, negative reactions, and in many cases, death.
Around 75% of the population already gets the MMR vaccine, and because vaccinations do not ensure full immunization, there’s no telling if increasing that percentage will actually help this.
Plus, herd immunity doesn’t necessarily work that way.
For example, according to the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, as low as 40% of the population would need to be vaccinated in order for herd immunity to be achieved.
Nevertheless, France is still using this argument to support their upcoming policy change.
”Today, in France, measles reappears. It is not tolerable that children die from it: 10 have died since 2008.
“Since this vaccine is only recommended and not mandatory, the coverage rate is 75 percent, whereas it should be 95 percent to prevent this epidemic. We have the same problem with meningitis,” France’s Minister of Health, Agnès Buzyn, said.
Image courtesy of: AJC1