Related post - f**king censorship
from Vaccinating Children While They Sleep - politically-confused.blogspot.com
by Adam S
When I first read about this I believed it was a fake. No, it's true - a group called "Shot Fairy" gives kids vaccinations in their sleep.
Taken from their homepage:
ABOUT US
Shotfairy.com was founded with one mission in mind: to provide you and your family with safe and convenient vaccinations in the comfort of your home. Our service, currently offered in the South Loop and Beverly neighborhoods of Chicago, Illinois, is designed to ensure the health and safety of your entire family. We offer vaccinations for adults and children. Parents especially appreciate Shotfairy.com’s “sleep time service” where our licensed nurses administer vaccines while your child is sleeping, thereby helping you and your child avoid the pain and anxiety associated with office vaccinations.
And read the description of "Nurse Peggy McKeever". It ends:
Nurse McKeever now vaccinates all of her children and many of her nieces and nephews at home while they sleep.
(Presumably with parental consent of course! Just, the way it's worded, it sounds like injecting sleeping children is an enjoyable pastime for Nurse McKeever.)
The predatory nature of this disgusting operation is mind-boggling. I guess, as someone said in response to the Examiner article on this, they don't have the heart to look the kid in the eye as they shoot them up with mercury.
It truly is a Brave New World, isn't it.
from Conspiracy fever: As rumours swell that the government staged 7/7, victims' relatives call for a proper inquiry - Mail Online
By Sue Reid
Last updated at 11:53 PM on 03rd July 2009
Today almost four years on, the images of that dreadful morning are etched into our minds.
Families of the dead victims and an increasing number of 7/7 survivors claim there are inconsistencies and basic mistakes in the official accounts that need explanation.
Central to the puzzle is which train the four Muslims caught from Luton to London on the morning of the bomb blasts - bearing in mind that the three separate Tube explosions at Edgware Road, Aldgate and King's Cross occurred together at exactly 8.50am, followed by the red bus an hour later near Tavistock Square.
The official reports said the bombers got on the 7.40am train from Luton which would have arrived at King's Cross in good time for them to board the Tube trains.
However, the 7.40am train never ran that morning. It was cancelled.
The Government has since corrected this information - but only after the error was raised by survivors - saying the bombers actually caught an earlier train, the 7.25am from Luton, for the 35-minute journey to King's Cross. It was due to arrive in the capital at 8am.
Yet this throws up more questions than it answers. For this train ran 23 minutes late because of problems with the overhead line which disrupted most of the service between Luton to King's Cross that morning. It arrived in London at 8.23am, say station officials.
According to the July Seventh Truth Campaign - another group calling for a public inquiry - this again places the official version of the bombers' travelling times in doubt.
A still CCTV photo of the four bombers arriving at the station in Luton is the only one of the four men together on July 7. Controversially, no CCTV images, either still or moving, of them in London have ever been released.
This photo is timed at four seconds before 7.22am. But if this were the case, the men would have had just three minutes to walk up the stairs at Luton, buy their £22 day return tickets and get to the platform, which was packed with commuters because of the earlier travel disruptions.
The Truth Campaign group is equally sceptical about the bombers' supposed arrival time at King's Cross.
They say it takes seven minutes to walk from the Thameslink line station to the main King's Cross station, where there is an entrance to the Tube network.
Police say the four men were seen on the main King's Cross concourse at 8.26am, although no CCTV footage has ever been made public.
But is this possible? How had the men got there in three short minutes after getting off the Luton train at 8.23am?
This week, a television documentary on BBC2 called Conspiracy Files 7/7 revealed the existence of a conspiracy theorist's 56-minute video called Ripple Effect.