Dr. Russell Blaylock: "The tetanus vaccine is one of the MOST RIDICULOUS vaccines ever."
Just got a cut or puncture wound? The ER is about to BULLY you into a TOXIC shot you don’t need.
Here’s what they won’t tell you:
The shot they push is NOT a simple tetanus vaccine — it’s the full DTaP combo loaded with:
• Aluminum (up to 0.625 mg — a known neurotoxin)
• Formaldehyde
• 2-phenoxyethanol + Triton X-100
• Milk protein (casein) & latex residues that can trigger anaphylaxis or CREATE new dairy/latex allergies
The tetanus toxoid inside has NEVER been properly safety-tested in a double-blind placebo-controlled trial. CDC admits it.
It’s grown on beef heart infusion with real risk of Mad Cow prion contamination.
Your actual chance of getting tetanus? 1 in 11 MILLION.
Spores live in manure, NOT rust. Clean the wound properly — oxygen kills them. 95% of the decline happened BEFORE any vaccine thanks to sanitation.
If you’re already exposed, the shot is useless — it takes 3-8 weeks for antibodies.
But high-dose Vitamin C (1–3g/day) cured 100% of cases in studies with ZERO deaths. Cheap. Safe. Ignored.
Why are we terrorized into this untested, poison-filled combo shot for a disease that’s basically extinct in clean countries?
Because fear sells.
Don’t fall for the rusty nail myth. Clean the wound. Monitor it. Refuse the jab.
Were you guilt-tripped into a “tetanus shot?” Were you ever told it was actually the full DTaP?
Does anyone else find it odd that $200 billion is spent on cancer research every single year...and the only thing to show for it is a 75% increase in cancer deaths since the 1990s?
This platform is poison for the mind. I find myself taking longer and longer breaks from it and every time I come back to it I realize there's just really not that much going for it anymore. It's pretty much become an exclusively divisive tool driven by mainly AI slop and click bait. It can't be good for us and our future.
I still love a lot of you guys though, the real ones, which is why I haven't totally bailed yet.
Tonight on 20/20 CHAT, I talk to @Piers_Corbyn about Covid jabs, comedy skits, the BBC, Palantir, digital ID, weather forecasting, climate change, chemtrails, David Bellamy, the Sikh community and the Nowak murder. Amazing how much you can fit into 20 minutes!
Watch the full interview here this evening at 20:20.
@DarrenPlymouth They can have my data, I don't care. I will never interact with the NHS again.
GP's in the UK are basically data brokers for Palantir now.
The age of patient/doctor confidentially is over.
Kemi Badenoch put in a long shift at Marks & Spencer yesterday after Percy Pig thief Rachel Reeves tried to scarper with several packets.
Thankfully, Kemi stopped her, and even sneaky Keir Starmer dressed as a lady couldn’t distract her from the job.
{satire}
November 1971. Chiswick, West London.
Erin Pizzey is 32 years old. She is not a lawyer. Not a politician. Not a doctor.
She is a woman who talked Hounslow Council into lending her a cold, rundown building on Belmont Road — a former community hall — for almost nothing. Her original plan was modest. A warm room. A cup of tea. Somewhere for mothers with young children to simply get out of the house.
Then the door opened.
A woman stood in the entrance. She was covered, head to foot, in bruises. She was holding two small children. She was shaking.
She didn't want tea.
She needed somewhere to hide.
Erin let her in. She didn't turn her away. She didn't tell her to call the police.
Because Erin had already called the police. They told her the same thing they told every woman in Britain at the time: they could not enter a private home over a "domestic dispute." That was the law. The home was private. What happened inside it was a family matter.
When Erin contacted a female civil servant to report what she was seeing, the response was astonishing. The woman told her flatly: "There wasn't a problem of battered wives until you made one."
Erin put down the phone. Then she went back to her residents and made sure they were fed.
Within weeks, 40 mothers and children were sleeping in four tiny rooms. No funding. No staff. No legal authority.
She didn't stop.
By 1973, word had spread through quiet whisper networks — one woman telling another, "There is a place. Go to Chiswick. She won't turn you away." That same year, Erin hosted the first National Women's Aid Conference in the UK. Women from across Britain arrived, and they all recognized the same thing at once: what she had built needed to exist everywhere.
In 1974, the council set a maximum of 36 residents. At peak times, 150 women and children were living inside those walls — sleeping on floors, on chairs, in hallways. The building smelled of cooking, fear, and something else entirely: relief.
Erin was taken to court for overcrowding. She appealed all the way to the House of Lords.
She kept the doors open the entire time.
That same year, she wrote a book. Scream Quietly or the Neighbours Will Hear. It was the first published account of domestic violence in British history. It used real stories from real women inside the shelter. Overnight, a problem that had no official name was on front pages from London to New York.
The movement spread. Refuges opened across the UK. Then Australia. Then Canada. Then the United States. The pattern she created in four small rooms in West London — no blueprint, no permission, no funding — had been replicated in hundreds of shelters across the Western world.
MP Jack Ashley stood up in Parliament and said: "It was she who first identified the problem, who first recognised the seriousness of the situation and who first did something practical."
She was ranked 14th in a poll of the 100 women who shook the world. She was awarded the Italian Peace Prize. She received a CBE. The charity she founded — Chiswick Women's Aid, which became Refuge — grew into the largest domestic violence charity in the United Kingdom, with over 460 employees and an annual income of more than £33 million.
Erin Pizzey passed away on October 4, 2025, aged 86.
She never stopped.
It all began with one woman, one borrowed building, and an absolute refusal to say no.
Forty women and children showed up with nowhere to go.
She made room.
Share this if you believe one ordinary person, refusing to look away, can build a shelter that holds the whole world.
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A man visits different psychiatrists offices, complaining of the same symptoms...
The world of psychiatry is a scam - a BigPharma scam, and a Globalist's scam: