RE: My experience with not vaccinating my child
Thank you for sharing your story. I know how you feel about being "pressured" into getting your child vaccinated. I was initially on the fence about vaccinations. While I know I definitely didn't want my child to contract polio or some other awful and life-threatening disease, I felt (and still feel) that some of the vaccinations are completely unnecessary. I discussed this with my child's doctor and I felt like I had a bait and switch pulled on me. I thought that my child was getting only certain vaccinations but after they had been administered I had realized that they weren't administering what I thought they were at all. I felt really angry about this and had even switched doctors but then after being pressured relentlessly and the doctor threatening to take my child off their patient list (there were only two pediatricians in my area) I felt I had no other choice but to finish the job. Thankfully we have had no complications but whenever I think about it I get extremely annoyed that my rights as a parent were violated like that.
I was doing some research a few months back; I found that courts corporations Blacks/Westminster law/Maritime/admiralty law, birth certificates, banks and debt, lawyers and doctors are all interrelated. If you study the language/etymology and lingo you can uncover some really strange things. Maritime law or seafaring law was applied to the courts and medical areas. Navel/naval. Birth/berth. Carriage/Mis-Carriage. Seaman. Referring to ships as "she". Its all related back to royal bloodline navy, but my point is that they see people as slaves. A mom is a vessel delivering a slave. The DOCKtor unloads the slave at the dock and immediately begins strange ceremonies and legal customs to claim the child for britian. People say, but we fought against britian in revolutionary war and we are free...hahahahaha, no. They see people as slaves, property who are only worth their "labor"- labor delivering babies and labor keeping slaves alive (farming) and mining and making tech advances until they dont need many of us anymore - after people get older and cant labor, they dont want them hanging around - thats why they are always poisoning foods, pushing soda in aluminum cans, and spending millions on got milk and vaccine campaigns - they want people to have enough energy to give labor, but not enough o think clearly or fight back. they want to people to be poisoned slowly over 60 years and then to die fairly young.
the schemes are elaborate and complex and have been carried out over long term like thousands of years which means there are beings or entities of some type directing things. This sounds crazy, but its the only thesis that explains all the things dont make sense. like why they put fluoride in water, why they have schools why they use pesticides and polluting oil and have families homeless instead of just making things good for everyone. The bottom line is that people are slaves labor is to pay the debts...its an ancient story being played out over and over.
Thanks for commenting. Your story is awful. I would have been terribly upset if they had done that with me and my daughter. Thank goodness that there were no issues caused.
I think the problem arose because I allowed them to do some but not others. For instance, I didn't feel it was necessary for my child to have a flu shot because they're not always completely effective and I wasn't going to be putting him in daycare. I also didn't think a hepatitis shot was necessary because I wasn't anticipating my 3mo old to become an intravenous drug user. Both of these were administered without my knowledge. Yes, I did sign off on the papers but I had made it clear that I wasn't interested in having him vaccinated for those things and they gave them to him anyway along with other shots after assuring me that they wouldn't be doing so.
That's so interesting and no, it doesn't sound crazy to me. It seems plausible.
My dad was a model citizen by those standards. He worked hard his entire life and died (from cancer) one day after he turned 65 which is retirement age here. He never claimed his pension as he didn't live long enough to do so.
I'm intrigued by the language/etymology you've referenced and I am going to look into it. Thanks for commenting.