Or that it was because people started washing their hands more. Funny thing is, these old diseases have been coming back recently at the same time as some people started thinking that they shouldn't vaccinate, but there hasn't been a similar movement against washing hands. Pretty sure vaccines may have had something to do with it.
11Reply
deleted
· 7 years ago
To be honest, if you don't have a doctor vaccinate your child, you shouldn't be a parent. you're clearly too stupid to raise a child if you believe in studies that have no viable proof.
Nevermind any other factors like improvements in hygiene practices, and products, sanitary sewers, cleaner water, cleaner food. Nope....all vaccines. Stupid propaganda bullsh**!
A lot of those vaccines are from the 1950s and later. If someone compared numbers from 1700s Europe where people threw their sh!t in the street, I'd say you might have a point. But, sewers and clean water were around in the 1950s. Also, if you were looking at life expectancy, other improvements would have contributed. But this is cases of specific diseases before and after their vaccines. Having clean water doesn't make polio go to zero, and having flush toilets doesn't affect reduce Hepatitis to post-vaccine levels. If you knew what you were arguing against--life expectancy vs actual cases of specific diseases--you wouldn't have embarrassed yourself.
Go fuck yourself. No it doesnt.