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Because like with all flu shots, they are made without being properly tested, especially the swine flu ones that had to be rushed everywhere because of the proclaimed pandemic. Long term effects are unknown, stuff like that. For all you know people could start dropping dead in a few years because of that.
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Don't be silly. Flu shots are a proved, tested vaccine. The changes in the vaccine from year to year are so minor that they don't need to be re-tested; nothing has been added that can possibly be harmful.
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I thin that for perhaps the last ten weeks before pregnancy or something, the baby is developed enough to be classed as a baby, not a foetus.
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Uhhh... Babies have survived (albeit physically disabled) after 22 weeks of pregnancy (that's with 18 weeks left to go). Most western countries do not allow abortions after 20-24 weeks. I personally think that those timelines are far too late, but I don't pretend to be an expert on the issue.
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No matter how little risk vaccines pose, if they pose a risk, forcing people to take them is horrible. It literally means that you are ok with a small percentage of people getting sick or possibly worse from vaccines for the greater good. And that train of thought is scary.
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Yes, vaccines have a miniscule risk. Not of autism, because that's bunk, but of allergic reaction. And generally parents are encouraged to keep their kids in the doctor's office for a little while after the first vaccinations, so that if there's any reaction the doctor can deal with it.
Now, take in to account the risk of not having the vaccines. Even taking in to account herd immunity, the probabilities of contracting whooping cough or mumps are far higher than the probability of a negative effect from the vaccine. And the effects of contracting those diseases are far, far worse than the (actual and fictional) reactions to the vaccine.
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Actually some inoculations have shown to correlate to autism levels where parents have given them to their children too early. My mother works with children with special needs and attends quite a number of courses, I think she was taught this if I remember correctly.
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Proof? I have only ever heard of one study that linked vaccinations to autism, and that has been roundly debunked.