History, Mass Murder

The Vaccine Genocide Chronicles: Part 2: Slaughter in the Philippines

Share:

“Deliver those who are drawn toward death,
And hold back those stumbling to the slaughter.
If you say, “Surely we did not know this,”
Does not He who weighs the hearts consider it?
He who keeps your soul, does He not know it?
And will He not render to each man according to his deeds?”
Proverbs 24:11-12, NKJV

by Steve Halbrook

Many Filipinos died as a result of the United States conquest of the Philippines, as the U.S. exported its genocidal vaccination program that was forced on the population. Smallpox vaccination increased the incidents and mortality of smallpox. Ian Sinclair writes,

In the Philippines, prior to US takeover in 1905, case mortality from smallpox was about 10%.  In 1905, following the commencement of systematic vaccination enforced by the US Government, an epidemic occurred where the case mortality ranged from 25% to 50% in different parts of the islands. In 1918-1919 with over 95% of the population vaccinated, the worst epidemic in the Philippine’s history occurred resulting in a case mortality of 65%. The highest percentage occurred in the capital Manila, the most thoroughly vaccinated place. The lowest percentage occurred in Mindanao, the least vaccinated place owing to religious prejudices. Dr V de Jesus, Director of Health, stated that the 1918-1919 smallpox epidemic resulted in 60,855 deaths. The 1920 Report of the Philippines Health Service contains the following comments:

“From the time in which smallpox was practically eradicated In the city of Manila to the year 1918 (about 9 years) in which the epidemic appears certainly In one of its severest forms, hundreds after hundreds of thousands of people were yearly vaccinated with the most unfortunate result that the 1918 epidemic looks prima facie as a flagrant failure of the classic Immunization towards future epidemics“.[1]

Drs. Archie Kalokerinos and Glen Dettman, who visited the Philippines, wrote the following in 1977:

During a recent visit to the Philippines we were fortunate enough to address their own medical health officials where we reminded them of the incidence of smallpox in formerly “immunized” Philippines. We invited these officials to consult their own medical records and asked them to correct us if our own facts and figures disagreed. No such correction has been forthcoming and we can only conclude that between 1918-1919 there were 112,549 cases of smallpox notified with 60,855 deaths. Systematic vaccination started in 1905 and since its introduction case mortality increased alarmingly. Their own records comment that, “The mortality is hardly explainable” (Hume, 1963).[2]

The recorded deaths between 1918-1919 may have been greater than 60,855. According to Ethel D. Hume, 

The Chief of the Division of Sanitation in the Provinces gives yet higher figures for the year 1919, increasing the total for the two years to 145,317 cases and 63,434 deaths.[3]

So, the smallpox vaccine campaign which began in 1905 triggered a large increase in smallpox mortality. Between 1918-1919 alone, there were between 60,855 to 63,434 deaths. And that’s recorded deaths — how many unrecorded, who knows.

(How many smallpox deaths were due to vaccination versus the natural disease is unclear; but clearly, based on what has been previously noted, the vaccine greatly increased the death rate.)

Moreover, this staggering number of deaths is only for a two-year period — how many died between 1905 and 1918, and after 1919, of smallpox due to the smallpox vaccine, is anyone’s guess.

Furthermore, how many were killed by the smallpox vaccine in another way besides smallpox is still another question. Vaccines have various ways of killing. And not just soon after the vaccine, but even much later in life, since poisoning the blood via vaccination has long-term consequences.

Indeed, the smallpox vaccine was known to cause all kinds of illnesses. Back in 1883, Dr. William Hitchman, Consulting Surgeon to the Cancer Hospital, Leeds, and formerly public vaccinator to the City of Liverpool (England), said:

Syphilis, Abdominal Phthisis, Scrofula, Cancer, Erysipelas, and almost all diseases of the skin, have been either conveyed, occasioned, or intensified by vaccination.[4]

And in fact, the 1921 Report of the Special Mission on Investigation to the Philippine Islands, headed by a one General Leonard Wood, states:

The statistics of the Philippine Health Service show that there has been a steady increase in recent years in cases of preventable diseases, especially typhoid, malaria, and tuberculosis.[5]

The use of the smallpox vaccine in the Philippines is one of many examples of the tragic failure of the vaccine to live up to its hype — the smallpox vaccine was not the savior that we are told it was. Apparently, vaccines are not so efficacious at preventing death and disease — but they are very efficacious in causing them.

Notes
____________________________________

[1] Ian Sinclair, “Smallpox,” in Vaccination The “Hidden” Facts (Australia). Retrieved January 10, 2018, from http://www.whale.to/vaccines/sinclair.html. 
[2] Archie Kalokerinos and Glen Dettman, Second Thoughts on Disease: A Controversy and Bechamp Revisted (1977). Retrieved January 10, 2018, from http://www.whale.to/w/kal.html. 
[3] Ethel D. Hume, Bechamp Or Pasteur?: A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology  (Castlemaine, Australia: Bechamp.org, 1923, 2006), 272.
[4] Transactions of the Makuna Vaccination Inquiry, p. 31, London, 1883. Cited in James Martin Peebles, Vaccination a Curse and a Menace to Personal Liberty: With Statistics Showing Its Dangers and Criminality (Los Angeles, CA: Peebles Publishing Company, 1913), 300.
[5] Cited in Hume, Bechamp Or Pasteur? , 271.

If you find this site helpful, please consider supporting our work.

(Visited 936 times, 1 visits today)
Tagged ,