A Shot In The Dark: Gardasil and HPV | Candace Owens | Ep. 1

1 year ago
7.95K

The increased number of childhood vaccines should be making us healthier. But in 2019, the US ranked 24th out of 44 countries in infant mortality. Candace questions the narrative that vaccines are making us healthier. She also shares her own traumatic story after receiving the Gardasil HPV vaccine.

1) CDC link clarifying that no amount of any type of alcohol is safe while pregnant:

https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol-pregnancy/about/index.html?CDC_AAref_Val=https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/fasd/alcohol-use.html

2) CDC link with reccomendation for Tdap vaccine for pregnant women

https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm6207a4.htm?s_cid=mm6207a4_w

** Note, in my podcast I misspoke and said "DTAP" is reccomended for pregnancy. Someone wrote me to clarify that its actually the "TDAP" that is reccomended for pregnant women. There are two types of TDAP vaccines available in the United States: Adacel and Boostrix. The ingredients are as follows (copied verbatim from the CDC website):

Each 0.5-mL dose of Adacel® (Sanofi Pasteur) contains 5 Lf tetanus toxoid, 2 Lf diphtheria toxoid, and acellular pertussis antigens (2.5 µg detoxified PT, 5 µg FHA, 3 µg pertactin, 5 µg FIM). Other ingredients per 0.5-mL dose include 1.5 mg aluminum phosphate (0.33 mg aluminum) as the adjuvant, ≤5 µg residual formaldehyde, <50 ng residual glutaraldehyde, and 3.3 mg (0.6% v/v) 2-phenoxyethanol (not as a preservative).
Each 0.5-mL dose of Boostrix® (GlaxoSmithKline) contains 5 Lf of tetanus toxoid, 2.5 Lf of diphtheria toxoid, 8 µg of inactivated PT, 8 µg of FHA, and 2.5 µg of pertactin (69 kiloDalton outer membrane protein). Each 0.5-mL dose contains aluminum hydroxide as adjuvant (not more than 0.39 mg aluminum by assay), 4.5 mg of sodium chloride, ≤100 µg of residual formaldehyde, and ≤100 µg of polysorbate 80 (Tween 80).
Here is the link to the above:
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vpd/dtap-tdap-td/hcp/about-vaccine.html

3) OECD link to graph on infant mortality amongst comparable countries:
https://www.oecd.org/en/data/indicators/infant-mortality-rates.html

**I have realized that the OECD makes an attempt to justify the United States low ranking with a rather spurious claim that "in Europe, several countries apply a minimum gestational age of 22 weeks (or a birth weight threshold of 500g) for babies to be registered as live births."

The implication then is that if your child is born weighing less than 500g, it is not counted in some countries as a birth. 500grams is just 17 ounces. I cannot find any data regarding how many infants are birthed alive weighing less than 17 ounces in the United States. For clarity, "live birth" means an infant that is born showing signs of life (beating heart, etc). If anybody can source this number, or can locate which countries in Europe decline to count the life of an infant born with a beating heart that weighs less 17 ounces, please let me know.

The OECD curiously does not list those countries, which is why I refer to the claim as spurious.

4) Cervical cancer rates and deaths for 2021 government link:

https://seer.cancer.gov/statfacts/html/cervix.html

5) American cancer society estimated cases and deaths for uterine cervix cancer link:

https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.3322/canjclin.55.1.10?sid=nlm%3Apubmed

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