Autism and hormones injected into beef, chicken etc...

sf wrote:

Not really, it's just the fact that the "religious" exemption for
vaccination in school admission is the easy way around their attempt at
rules, so that's what people will claim. Few of those people actually
have any "religious" reason for why they don't want to vaccinate their
children.
 
On Mon, 21 Feb 2011 13:30:48 -0000, Janet wrote:

People were finding excuses why not to inoculate their children in the
'80s and probably before. It didn't suddenly start then.


--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Mon, 21 Feb 2011 08:39:13 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
wrote:


What part of "Lanie... nobody can "inject" autism into meat.... but
animals are fed growth hormones. Google information about it and
don't get all weirded out about that theory before you gather some
facts" confused you and Miche?

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Feb 20, 2:14?am, sf wrote:
Knowingly faking research that has cause thousands of children to skip
immunizations leads to children dying. Children too young to get the
vaccine are protected by herd immunity. Scientists who fake research,
and convince ignorant parents not to vaccinate their children, are no
better than someone who gives a child a loaded gun to play with.
http://thestir.cafemom.com/toddler/114684/autism_vaccine_doc_andrew_wakefield

--Bryan
 
In article ,
"J. Clarke" wrote:




I believe that John Kuthe has posted, more than once, that the LD50 for
water for an average human is 6 liters. We have had many discussions on
this group about death from overconsumption of water.

My father worked in an industrial environment. It was a very dangerous
environment, so they used compressed air to power tools. Some guys
thought it was funny to "goose" other guys with the air. Something
happened, and somehow it penetrated the abdominal cavity. The worker
died. Deep sea divers can easily die from the effects of air. If they
have been down at depth for more than a few minutes, they have to be put
in a decompression chamber or they will die.

So yes, fluoride, and sodium fluoride in particular, can be fatal, but
not at doses used for fluoridation.

Of course, we all drink chlorinated water at some point, and yet
chlorine gas was used to kill people in WWII.

--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
[email protected]
 
sf wrote:

Not really, it's just the fact that the "religious" exemption for
vaccination in school admission is the easy way around their attempt at
rules, so that's what people will claim. Few of those people actually
have any "religious" reason for why they don't want to vaccinate their
children.
 
"J. Clarke" wrote:

Bear in mind that those thresholds are subject to revision as more
scientific data is collected. Also bear in mind that there are
interactions with other substances in the environment and what may be a
"safe" level of toxin X may interact with another compound to produce
toxin Y at a level which is not "safe".
 
sf wrote:
So you're saying you didn't know some students in schools are not
vaccinated? As a parent, not a teacher, you never read or heard anything
about vaccinations that just stuck in those vast, deep memory banks to
be drawn on later??
 
On Feb 19, 5:35?pm, lainie wrote:

You might have a lot more to worry about if the parents
a. drive like idiots, endangering the kids' lives.
b. smoke in the house
c. feed the kids junk, soda, etc.


These are just a few of the things which come to mind which can rob a
kid of health and nurturing a lot faster than hormones.
 
Pete C. wrote:

Hey, lets talk Typhoid Mary! Interesting topic and food related! She was
an Irish cook who was an unknown carrier of typhus and passed it along
unknowingly to the families that she cooked for. She was first traced
to the problem while cooking for a wealthy family in Oyster Bay, LI, NY.
The Health Department fought to convince her of her infection but she
swore she never had it. Poor hygiene practices allowed her to keep
passing it on until the state of NY isolated her on an island after she
refused to stop cooking (and risking others lives) for a living.
Interesting stuff, huh?

Don'tcha hate seeing fast food workers(or perhaps any food workers) with
those long talon like fake nails, touching food? Ugh!!
 
On Feb 19, 8:43?pm, Sky wrote:

The vaccine theory was de-mythed many months ago. However, it would
seem that many more children are being diagnosed with autism, I was
simply wondering out loud if it was something dietary. Not unlike
young girls reaching puberty earlier than they did even a decade ago.
 
In article
,
Kalmia wrote:


That brings up an interesting question, which I had never thought about
before. I am a severe Type II diabetic, and I inject insulin twice a
day. A common question I'm asked is why I don't just take insulin
orally? Well, that's because the body digests the insulin. It's just
food. That makes sense. I learned here on this group that insulin is
not a very complicated substance. In the past, insulin was obtained
from slaughterhouses, from pigs and cows. I don't know why that isn't
used anymore (they clone human insulin now), but it worked fine. So
it's fine that it's digested, because otherwise, every time you ate a
nice juicy steak, it would affect your insulin levels. So, is it the
same for other animal hormones? That makes sense, since normally when
they give medicines to animals, they put it in their food. That's a lot
easier than giving the animal an injection. You would give an animal an
injection rather than put it in the food if oral administration didn't
work, or didn't work well.

--
Dan Abel
Petaluma, California USA
[email protected]
 
On Feb 19, 8:43?pm, Sky wrote:

The vaccine theory was de-mythed many months ago. However, it would
seem that many more children are being diagnosed with autism, I was
simply wondering out loud if it was something dietary. Not unlike
young girls reaching puberty earlier than they did even a decade ago.
 
On Wed, 23 Feb 2011 16:03:40 -0700, "graham" wrote:


I could be hit by lightening any time too.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On 2/23/2011 9:23 AM, sf wrote:

It's interesting that there's such a different experience between high
school and college for smart underachievers and Aspergers kids. I wish
that wasn't so.
 
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