Local Muslims against vaccine

By William R. Toler

Last week, WCTI-12 reported on a group of Muslims in Pitt County who are against the H1N1 vaccine.

“It’s a vaccination that has been placed out and not been fully experimented and may cause injury to those who are injected with that vaccination,” Remonia Muhammad told the New Bern-based television station. She believes that the vaccine was contrived purely for profit. “The question needs to be asked how much money are the pharmaceutical companies making off producing the vaccination…of course it’s a money making business.”

Muhammad is not alone in her assessment. Dr. Len Horowitz and Dr. Sherri Tenpenny have both issued their concerns about the swine flu vaccine as well as vaccinations in general. Nurses have also expressed concern over mandatory vaccinations and being threatened with their jobs should they refuse.


For years, Dr. Horowitz has researched and claimed that many viruses of the past 60 years have been created using the “Problem, Reaction, Solution” scenario in which a larger force creates a problem, causing panic and then creates the solution…and profits.

Ever since I first learned what a vaccination really was, I’ve been skeptical of them. Over the past year I have heard the two doctors on Coast to Coast A.M., especially since the recent HINI “outbreak” earlier this year, and have become even more skeptical of vaccines and western medicine in general.

On her Web site, Dr. Tenpenny lists several ingredients of the regular flu shot which include: egg proteins, sucrose, resin and thimerosal (mercury).

Back in May, she published an article on the recent flu stating about the “outbreak ” in 1976:

The absolute belief in the effectiveness of vaccines resulted in the disability of 532 people who contracted Guillain-Barre Syndrome, a life-threatening form of paralysis. While many recovered in the ensuing months, at least 33 died and up to 10 percent remained paralyzed to varying degrees for the rest of their lives. While vaccine manufacturers reaped the rewards of government handouts to make vaccines, and secured legislation to protect them from liability (the Swine Flu Act of 1976), more than $1.3 billion of tax payer dollars were released to compensate those who had been injured by the swine flu vaccine.

Of course you have the public health shills who contend that vaccines are safe and recipients “may experience minor side affects such as soreness or redness at the site of the injection,” as Joey Huff of the Lenoir County Health Department told Newschannel 12.

I’m not telling anyone whether or not to get vaccinated. Do your own research and make your own decisions. Do not just blindly take the hype and help thrown at you by the mainstream media and governmental health officials.

1 Comment

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One response to “Local Muslims against vaccine

  1. Richard

    If people knew what was in it no one , in their right mind, would take it. But most of the people are not in their right mind, they are just sheep. So go BAA, BAA to the quack and take a chance.

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