quote:
Originally posted by interventor12:
Considering that mercury was used more frequently in dentistry in the past, than now, autism should be decreasing, instead of increasing.
Ventor,
Mercury is added as a preservative to a vaccine. The problem is the ability to control the amounts added. As a percentage, lets say 1 out of every 10 doses recieve a higher than acceptable amount of Mercury. That would make 1 put of 10 doses potentially fatal or cause of neurological disease such as autism. The problem with Mercury is that it almost always winds up in the brain.
Squalene on the other hand is added as an "accelerant" to a vaccine. In the case of the swine flu vaccine, it is supposed to accelerate the rate in which the immune system is triggered into action. Normally, when antibodies encounter the invasion from the virus, then the immune system is triggered. Squalene is supposed to trigger the immune system to begin looking for virus's.
The problem for squalene is that the body recognizes it as a potential enemy. Being a chemical, it cannot be killed. What happens is that it deposits into joints and muscle tissues.
The immune system attacks the tissues that has the squalene in it, thus the body begins to destroy it's own good tissue in an effort to destroy the squalene. This is where the "Gulf War Syndrome" came from. Aching joints, fatigue and deteriorating muscle tissue.