stickdog99 wrote: Why are we continuing to inject millions upon millions of people with thimerosal?
Maybe because of costs, and maybe because the fungal and bacterial infections incident to the injection of improperly preserved vaccines present a greater danger than the thimerosal, which hasn't really been demonstrated to be dangerous despite numerous studies.
stickdog99 wrote:The concentration of mercury in a thimerosal-laden shot of influenza vaccine is such that if you diluted the 0.5 ml dose with 2 quarts of water it would still qualify as toxic waste by EPA standards.
Can we examine this statement? I mean, by citing the relevant EPA standard in ppm and relating that to the influenza shot+two quarts of water thing? Because baloney like this is why I enter these arguments at all, if you really want to know. So let's do this...
- An infant shot of "Thimerosal Preserved" vaccine such as Chiron's Fluvirin and Aventis' Fluzone is a dose of 0.25-mL containing 50 ppm of mercury. There are four doses in a milliliter so 50 ppm/4 = 12.5 ppm in one mL.
1 US quart = 0.946352946 liter, but let's just call it one-to-one for ease of understanding, even though the dilution is actual more. So our dilution with two quarts of water would now be:
12.5 / 2000 = 0.00625 ppm
The Food and Nutrition Board of Institute of Medicine of the National Academies recommends that foods contain no more than 2 parts per million of lead and no more than one ppm of mercury. So injesting fifty mercury laden fishsticks of the proper size can give you the same level of exposure to mercury as a thimerosal preserved flu shot.
The federal requirements for drinking water are far more stringent. They set 0.002 parts per million in drinking water as the maximum allowable amount.
As someone who deals with federal guidelines regarding inorganic contaminants in drinking water on a daily basis, I can assure you that 0.00625 ppm of mercury is by no stretch of the imagination considered "toxic waste". You could double or quadruple that amount, and it still wouldn't be. The Department of Health would require a municipality or small water system to solve this problem by further diluting the contaminated water with water of a lower level of mercury to meet the requirements. And the reason for the discrepancy between the maximum levels for food and water is that it is expected that municipal residents will be exposed to whatever contaminants are in their water for years or decades on end. If, however, you happen to be drinking from an unregulated private well (in California at least) the chances that you are exposed to inorganic contaminants on a regular basis are quite high. But even in the case of a municipal problem associated with such contamination, the DHS almost never shuts down the water supply while the dilution/mixing is being accomodated. You drink what you get til it's fixed. It's not considered toxic waste, or deadly, whatsoever.
However, I'd be interested to know just where you got that idea in the first place - did you make it up as a colorful but misguided piece of rhetoric? Or had you encountered this massively erroneous bit of wisdom somewhere in your travels?
Undead questioned my motivations upthread, and the reality is that I've never taken psychiatric medication, and neither has anyone in my family. I'm not really pro-pharma at all, just anti-tehstupid.
stickdog99 wrote:Whether [Wakefield] fudged the onset of symptom dates (which seems to be the heart of Deer's new "explosive" allegations, but please correct me if I'm wrong), hardly matters from a scientific POV. It would call into doubt Wakefield's integrity, of course, but it really would not change the conclusions of the study one iota.
It would if the onset of symptoms occurred before the individual came into contact with the vaccine, wouldn't it?