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<strong>Virginia</strong> <strong>Teen</strong> <strong>Athlete</strong> <strong>In</strong> <strong>Wheel</strong> <strong>Chair</strong> <strong>After</strong> <strong>H1N1</strong> <strong>Vaccine</strong><br />
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www.<strong>healthfreedoms</strong>.<strong>org</strong> /virginia-teen-athlete-in-wheel-chair-after-h1n1-vaccine-shot/<br />
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A teenage <strong>Virginia</strong> athlete is in a wheel chair now after suffering Guillain-Barre Syndrome within hours after<br />
receiving an <strong>H1N1</strong> swine flu vaccine shot.Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS) is the name given to anyone who exhibits<br />
a particular set of neurological symptoms including muscle weakness and muscle spasms. 14-year-old Jordan<br />
McFarland developed severe headaches, muscle spasms and weakness in his legs after being injected. He will<br />
need “extensive physical therapy” to recovery, reports MSNBC. Plus, he’ll need the help of a walker for four to six<br />
weeks. NaturalNews) A teenage <strong>Virginia</strong> athlete is in a wheel chair now after suffering Guillain-Barre Syndrome<br />
within hours after receiving an <strong>H1N1</strong> swine flu vaccine shot. 14-year-old Jordan McFarland developed severe<br />
headaches, muscle spasms and weakness in his legs after being injected. He will need “extensive physical therapy”<br />
to recovery, reports MSNBC. Plus, he’ll need the help of a walker for four to six weeks.<br />
Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS) is the name given to anyone who exhibits a particular set of neurological symptoms<br />
including muscle weakness and muscle spasms. GBS is now increasingly occurring following <strong>H1N1</strong> vaccine<br />
injections. It was diagnosed in thousands of patients following the 1976 swine flu vaccine scare, and it appears to be<br />
recurring here in 2009 as the swine flu vaccine makes it into more widespread distribution.<br />
Health authorities, however, remain adamant that <strong>H1N1</strong> vaccines are never the cause of GBS, and that such<br />
diagnoses are “pure coincidence.” This blatantly unscientific P.R. tactic is designed to dismiss any and all concerns<br />
over the neurological side effects of <strong>H1N1</strong> vaccines by simply denying they exist. To date, the CDC has received<br />
reports of five additional people being diagnosed with GBS following swine flu vaccinations, but it dismisses them all<br />
as coincidence. “It’s much less than we’d expect,” says CDC official Dr. Claudia J. Vellozzi. (Which is sort of<br />
interesting all by itself, because it reveals that the CDC expects a lot more people to get GBS following vaccine<br />
injections…)<br />
At the same time, part of the reason the CDC isn’t receiving many reports on neurological disorders caused by<br />
<strong>H1N1</strong> vaccines is because they participated in a massive media brainwashing event that prepped the population to<br />
dismiss all side effects by pre-announcing the bizarre idea that “side effects experienced after vaccine injections are<br />
not related to vaccines.”<br />
This was an <strong>org</strong>anized, nationwide media brainwashing campaign engineered by the CDC, FDA and drug<br />
companies. It sought to pre-program health consumers to automatically dismiss serious side effects that appeared in<br />
the hours after receiving swine flu vaccine injections.<br />
The campaign worked. <strong>In</strong> fact, even the GBS of this young man, Jordan McFarland, wasn’t submitted to the CDC. It<br />
only came to light when his step-mother submitted details to MSNBC.com’s reader reporting tool. <strong>In</strong> other words,<br />
this was citizen journalism at work, where a parent submitted information directly to the media.<br />
For this to occur is exceedingly rare. Most parents would simply wait for their doctor to submit such information to<br />
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health authorities, not knowing that submitting reports of vaccine-related side effects remains voluntary in modern<br />
medicine.<br />
No requirement to report vaccine side effects<br />
You read that right: There is no requirement that doctors send reports of vaccine side effects to any health authority<br />
at all. And that raises the question: So how do they really know how many people are suffering neurological side<br />
effects from the <strong>H1N1</strong> vaccines?<br />
http://www.naturalnews.com/027473_Guillain-Barre_Syndrome_swine_flu_vaccine.html<br />
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