How Vaccine Brain Injuries Were Rebranded and Erased From Memory
midwesterndoctor.com
Story at a Glance:
- For over a century, vaccination has been repeatedly linked to severe neurological injuries including brain damage—with many modern studies showing a 3-10 fold increase in common chronic illnesses.
- To dodge this massive liability, all research into vaccine injuries (and many other catastrophes like Agent Orange) was suppressed so that health authorities could claim there was “no evidence” of vaccine harm.
- Another scheme was to redefine the brain injury as “autism” rather than encephalitis (which the US government was legally required to provide injury compensation for).
- Previously, children with significant vaccine brain damage were referred to as “mentally retarded.” However, after a multi-decade campaign cancelled “retarded” they were instead diagnosed as autistic—a vague term which blurs severe and minor disability together, thereby effectively concealing the severe cases from the public’s awareness.
- This article will reveal the manipulative techniques and wordplay that have been used to conceal vaccine injuries from the public’s awareness, as now is the time when we can at last end this atrocity.
I've long believed that public relations (propaganda) is one of the most powerful but invisible forces in our society. Again and again, I've watched professional PR firms create narratives that most of the country believes, regardless of how much it goes against their self-interests. What's most remarkable is that despite the exact same tactics being used repeatedly on the public, most people simply can't see it. When you try to point out exactly how they're being bamboozled by yet another PR campaign, they often can't recognize it—instead insisting you're paranoid or delusional.
That's why one of my major goals in this publication has been to expose this industry. Once you understand their playbook—having "independent" experts push sculpted language that media outlets then repeat—it becomes very easy to spot, and saves you from falling into the traps most people do. The COVID-19 vaccines, for instance, were facilitated by the largest PR campaign of our lifetime.
One of the least appreciated consequences of this industry is that many of our cultural beliefs ultimately originate from PR campaigns. This explains why so many widely believed things are "wrong"—if a belief were actually true, it wouldn't require a massive PR investment to instill in society. Due to PR's power, the viewpoints it instills tend to crowd out other cultural beliefs.
In this article, we'll take a deeper look at what's behind one of those implanted beliefs: "vaccines don't cause autism." |