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  Por Nelson Silverman.

Marjorie Taylor Greene, representante de EE. UU., hizo comentarios sobre las “fiestas del sarampión”, donde los niños se exponen intencionalmente al virus para desarrollar inmunidad. Mencionó que estas prácticas eran comunes en el pasado, comparándolas con las fiestas de la varicela. Sin embargo, las autoridades sanitarias han condenado enérgicamente esta idea, enfatizando los peligros del sarampión y la importancia de la vacunación.

Los expertos médicos no recomiendan las fiestas del sarampión, ya que puede provocar complicaciones graves, como inflamación cerebral, neumonía e incluso la muerte. La vacunación sigue siendo la forma más segura y eficaz de prevenir la enfermedad.

Solían organizar fiestas contra el sarampión, básicamente reunían a todos los niños para que se contagiaran y desarrollaran inmunidad. Luego, cuando yo era niño, hicieron lo mismo con la varicela. Ahora, demonizan a los padres que se niegan a vacunar a sus hijos.

Marjorie Taylor Greene

La idea de Marjorie Taylor Greene es, en realidad, una perspectiva psicótica, si uno ha estado en un país “civilizado” que encontró la manera de eliminar el sarampión mediante la vacunación hace años. Regresar a una sociedad que básicamente está cometiendo un genocidio contra su población es alarmante, y todos lo sabemos.

Es lamentable que Greene esté siguiendo las políticas de reversión de su partido con la intención de retroceder en cualquier trabajo de apariencia humanitaria que beneficie a toda la sociedad.

 


PrisioneroEnArgentina.com

Marzo 18, 2025


 

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12 thoughts on “Una perspectiva psicótica”

    • susan lee moritz
    • posted on March 19, 2025

    This woman in bad news.

    • john michael hessemann
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    Marjorie Taylor Greens boyfriend is the one who asked Zelinsky why he doesn’t wear a suit. Perfect couple

    • Alberto Mcgrath
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    zx

    • Joaquin
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    Como pueder ser?
    Semejante bestia en el gobierno?

    • Mirian Pedrueza
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    Anti vacunas, tierra plana, negación del cambio climático, etc. todos locos e ignorantes.

    • Heidi Meyer
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    MTG is the perfect example of a Federal employee who should lose their job. She does not deserve her job.

      • Lauren Shipp
      • posted on March 18, 2025

      MTG is a waste of our taxes.

        • Jackie from the block
        • posted on March 18, 2025

        I nearly died of measles at the age of two I feel qualified to comment on this one. It is necessary to protect a child from catching measles because it can kill or seriously disable the child for life. I caught measles before there was a vaccination for it. I was seriously ill. The skin peeled off the palms of my hands and I had nightmares and a very high fever, the doctor said it was touch and go whether I would survive. It damaged my hearing and my balance, and it played havoc with my immune system. I have had tinnitus ever since too. I was constantly ill with ear, nose and throat infections, flu and other illnesses because I had no resistance to them. This happened right up to my teens on a regular basis and I missed a huge amount of school because of it. I then got bullied by the head teacher who did not believe I was ill so often. I have never been able to balance since I had measles and this is a direct result of it. I am also clumsy and think this may be the result of it too. Before I caught measles I was always climbing and balancing afterwards I kept falling over to one side and I still do. I was bullied at school by peers because I could not balance or do sport because of it. I have met several people who have life long conditions because of measles, mainly deafness, some lost their hearing completely. I also once met a woman who said that her son would have been my age but he died in the same epidemic as the one I caught it in. Anyone who willfully exposes a child to this disease is failing to protect that child from harm and they are ignoring the scientific evidence.

    • Blair Kaminsky
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    I was born in 1969. I’ve never attended a measles, chicken pox or any other disease party. Unlike Marjorie Taylor Greene, my parents weren’t idiots.

      • Lauren Shipp
      • posted on March 18, 2025

      Any adult who gives a measles party for kids should be prosecuted for child abuse.

        • Maya katz
        • posted on March 18, 2025

        Parents who refuse to vaccinate also should be charged with child abuse. Just because people survive their childhood measles is like saying I survived my childhood without seatbelts. So we don’t need vaccines and seatbelts? You can’t ignore the statistics of those that didn’t survive. There was plenty. Why would they make a vaccine or seatbelts if people didn’t die? They need to find a vaccine that will give critical thinking skills.

    • Heather Turner
    • posted on March 18, 2025

    She is retarded.

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