Children's Health Defense
Collective Evolution
Bill Gates is fond of using his bully pulpit to talk about "miracles" and "magic." Gates has featured one or both words in nearly all of his annual wrap-up letters for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2016 and 2017), most often in reference to the Gates Foundation's outsized financial and ideological support for global vaccine programs. As Gates says, "In the same way that during my Microsoft career I talked about the magic of software, I now spend my time talking about the magic of vaccines."
Gates's words give us an immediate clue that he is engaging in his own brand of magical thinking-which social scientists define as "illogical causal reasoning." How else to explain his simplistic endorsement of vaccines as a miraculous intervention with unmitigated benefits and no down side? The Gates Foundation's global spreadsheet appears to have no room to tally the massive flood of vaccine injuries afflicting children worldwide, despite abundant evidence that this damage is standing the vaccine risk-benefit calculus on its head and turning childhood into an extended round of Russian roulette.
Let's report history accurately
In a widely cited 2014 blog post on the "miracle of vaccines," Gates expressed enthusiasm about the "inspiring" data on vaccines and the "fantastic" and "phenomenal" progress being made to expand vaccine coverage. There is one major problem with Gates' professed reliance on "data," which is that the philanthropist ignores fundamental historical facts governing infectious disease and vaccine timelines.
Vital statistics data reveal that in the U.S. and elsewhere, fatalities from diseases such as scarlet fever-in the absence of any vaccine-had become quite rare by the mid-20th century. Mortality from infectious diseases such as measles and whooping cough (pertussis) also had declined rapidly, well before the introduction of the corresponding vaccines (see Figure 1). A meticulous review of U.S. mortality data from 1900-1973 concluded:
"Medical measures [such as vaccines] contributed little to the overall decline in mortality in the United States since about 1900-having in many instances been introduced several decades after a marked decline had already set in."
The same researchers, in another article, chastised the medical establishment for its misplaced confidence in "magic bullets" (there is that word "magic" again!). Instead, if the decline in infectious disease incidence and mortality in the last century represented any kind of "miracle," the phenomenon was, by all honest accounts, attributable to classic and long-term public health measures such as better sanitation and, especially, improved nutrition. A study of 20th-century mortality trends in Italy found a significant association between increased caloric intake and declining mortality, reflecting "progress in average nutritional status, lifestyle quality, socioeconomic level and hygienic conditions." Moreover, mortality dropped most sharply in Italy's youngest age groups-who were "probably the most sensible to the changes in nutrition and wellness." Even early 20th-century epidemiologists who were inclined to give some credit to vaccines recognized that other factors were at play, including changes in "human resistance and bacterial quality" as well as factors yet to be determined.
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Collective Evolution
Bill Gates is fond of using his bully pulpit to talk about "miracles" and "magic." Gates has featured one or both words in nearly all of his annual wrap-up letters for the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2016 and 2017), most often in reference to the Gates Foundation's outsized financial and ideological support for global vaccine programs. As Gates says, "In the same way that during my Microsoft career I talked about the magic of software, I now spend my time talking about the magic of vaccines."
Gates's words give us an immediate clue that he is engaging in his own brand of magical thinking-which social scientists define as "illogical causal reasoning." How else to explain his simplistic endorsement of vaccines as a miraculous intervention with unmitigated benefits and no down side? The Gates Foundation's global spreadsheet appears to have no room to tally the massive flood of vaccine injuries afflicting children worldwide, despite abundant evidence that this damage is standing the vaccine risk-benefit calculus on its head and turning childhood into an extended round of Russian roulette.
Let's report history accurately
In a widely cited 2014 blog post on the "miracle of vaccines," Gates expressed enthusiasm about the "inspiring" data on vaccines and the "fantastic" and "phenomenal" progress being made to expand vaccine coverage. There is one major problem with Gates' professed reliance on "data," which is that the philanthropist ignores fundamental historical facts governing infectious disease and vaccine timelines.
Vital statistics data reveal that in the U.S. and elsewhere, fatalities from diseases such as scarlet fever-in the absence of any vaccine-had become quite rare by the mid-20th century. Mortality from infectious diseases such as measles and whooping cough (pertussis) also had declined rapidly, well before the introduction of the corresponding vaccines (see Figure 1). A meticulous review of U.S. mortality data from 1900-1973 concluded:
"Medical measures [such as vaccines] contributed little to the overall decline in mortality in the United States since about 1900-having in many instances been introduced several decades after a marked decline had already set in."
The same researchers, in another article, chastised the medical establishment for its misplaced confidence in "magic bullets" (there is that word "magic" again!). Instead, if the decline in infectious disease incidence and mortality in the last century represented any kind of "miracle," the phenomenon was, by all honest accounts, attributable to classic and long-term public health measures such as better sanitation and, especially, improved nutrition. A study of 20th-century mortality trends in Italy found a significant association between increased caloric intake and declining mortality, reflecting "progress in average nutritional status, lifestyle quality, socioeconomic level and hygienic conditions." Moreover, mortality dropped most sharply in Italy's youngest age groups-who were "probably the most sensible to the changes in nutrition and wellness." Even early 20th-century epidemiologists who were inclined to give some credit to vaccines recognized that other factors were at play, including changes in "human resistance and bacterial quality" as well as factors yet to be determined.
Read more
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