All the COVID variants didn’t work. The bird flu scare didn’t work, although nearly 200 million chickens are dead and our food supply is decimated. People are not getting flu shots. The sheep are not complying! What is the New World Order to do?
Welcome to the measles scare, the new COVID 2.0. This all started in late February, right on time according to Dr. Peter Hotez’s chilling prediction that some “big picture stuff is coming down the pike starting on January 21st” on the very day of Trump’s inauguration.
Hotez named nearly a dozen viruses. They tried a few scares until one seemed to stick, and that one is measles.
The death headlines came: “An unvaccinated child in Texas has died from measles.”
It was incredible, sweeping fast as only the MSM can do, and managing to hit all the talking points in one article:
- the child is unvaccinated
- the latest measles cases are in a religious Mennonite community that doesn’t vaccinate (gotta slam the Christians)
- “the death comes as immunization rates decline nationwide” – scare tactic for everyone to run out and get vaccinated
- “tested positive for measles and died within 24 hours” – scare tactic to convince everyone that measles is much more deadly than it actually is
- “measles is an airborne threat” (you can’t escape it, even in the open air expanses of West Texas-AAAGGGHHH!)
It’s sad, but true, and @kevinnbass on X says it best: The media is never going to let a child’s tragic death go to waste—not when they can use it to ramp up the fear-mongering and hopefully drive folks to vaccine clinics in droves.
Don’t fall for the hype. The “wait 48 hours (or more)” advice is always good to follow. On a recent episode of our Critically Thinking podcast, Drs. Lee Merritt and Larry Palevsky discussed the case.
Dr. P actually spoke with the Texas doctor who was caring for the child. He confirmed that the child was in the Mennonite community and had not been vaccinated with MMR prior to hospitalization. When the child (at home) started having significant respiratory distress and high fever, the parents sought medical care. The 6-year-old girl was diagnosed with RSV pneumonia. The girl was not under 24/7 care by her parents in the hospital, so there is a question whether the hospital staff administered the MMR vaccine or other medications while the parents were out for brief periods. The child did have measles. Dr. P says the family was not treated well by the hospital staff. This is not a surprise. The parents begged the doctors for breathing treatments which were never forthcoming. The girl went into respiratory failure and Dr. P believes she was intubated.
The point is that this girl could have died from multiple things. She could have died from measles, but she also could have (more likely) died of RSV, pneumonia or medical interventions (the third leading cause of death in hospitals.)
Ginger Taylor asks the right question in her substack about the Texas girl’s “measles death”: When will we start calling medical neglect for industry profit, “murder?” Children’s Health Defense interviewed the parents; watch and judge for yourself what you think happened to their daughter.
RFK Jr. Is Doing the Only Thing He Can Do At This Time
Dr. P says the child’s medical records are in “good hands” now, meaning with the HHS, and that presumably means in the hands of RFK Jr. Speaking of RFK Jr., let’s pivot to that. Less than two weeks after his mid-February confirmation, the measles scare started. Given Hotez’s spewage, could it be that the powers that be wanted to make sure RFK Jr. started his position amidst controversy? Kinda like Peter Strzok’s insurance policy?
The article slamming started like this: “During a meeting of President Donald Trump’s cabinet, Kennedy downplayed the situation, stating, “It’s not unusual. You have measles outbreaks every year.”
RFK Jr. is right. This is not unusual. There ARE cases every year.
When RFK Jr. wrote a measles op ed, it sparked A LOT of controversy. I mean a LOT, because vaccines were included as part of a comprehensive approach to the disease. What is he supposed to say? People have been mad about RFK Jr. not blasting vaccines during his confirmation hearing. He could have done that, and been voted down, then where would we be? Keep in mind he actually had to get into his current HHS position before he could effect change. The reality is we still live in a very pro-vaccine world. Our audience isn’t part of that world, but most people are. RFK Jr. said the only thing he could possibly say. He also clearly stated that vaccines were a CHOICE: “Parents play a pivotal role in safeguarding their children’s health. All parents should consult with their healthcare providers to understand their options to get the MMR vaccine. The decision to vaccinate is a personal one. Vaccines not only protect individual children from measles, but also contribute to community immunity, protecting those who are unable to be vaccinated due to medical reasons.”
The MSM immediately spun out of control on many angles because that is what their overlords wanted them to do. This is all planned. We need to keep that in mind. The MSM immediately went off half cocked about Vitamin A, and reminded people that Bobby is not a medical doctor, therefore doomed to fail in his HHS role. Again, this is a total lie; Meryl Nass has already reminded us that most HHS directors have historically been lawyers and politicians. The MSM quickly bolstered their shows with “board-certified medical experts” to downplay RFK Jr.’s expertise and talk about the importance of vaccines, insinuating that RFK Jr. was anti-vaccine.
You are smart readers, and you know the dangers of vaccines, because Dr. Tenpenny has taught you well over the years. But the truth is that Bobby Kennedy cannot come out swinging saying he is anti-vaccine on everything. Keep in mind these people are unleashing pandemics ON PURPOSE but those of us who actually know that are in the minority. He is fighting the greatest crime syndicate on Earth; it’s called Big Pharma, and to take it down, he must eat the elephant one bite at a time.
Instead of looking at what RFK Jr. didn’t do, I’ve changed my focus to look at what he did do. Sayer Ji points out that in RFK Jr’s measles response, he did something that frankly hasn’t been done in HHS in decades – he talked about a holistic approach to disease prevention rather than the prevailing thought and single-minded focus that vaccines are the only way to prevent disease. We all know this is both historically and scientifically flawed, once again because Dr. Tenpenny has taught us well for the past two decades. Read RFK Jr.’s op ed closely; he mentions the role of environmental and nutritional factors in disease prevention. No one from the HHS or CDC has done that. He is introducing the holistic concept; remember that elephant, one bite at a time. No, it’s not fast enough for those of us who understand; things never happen fast enough for us. It’s frustrating but we are in a war after all. A war against Big Pharma.
The Fear Mongering Continues
Three weeks after the Texas girl’s death, the fear mongering continues with rising cases in Texas and now New Mexico, with an increasing number of hospitalizations. “Officials warn the outbreak is likely to grow.” “The confirmed death should serve as a reminder that there was a reason that the vaccine was developed and that the vaccine is a value to individuals.” Of course this latest quote is from an infectious disease physician at Johns Hopkins University. Ah, Johns Hopkins – the foremost experts. Have you heard that JHU received over $800 million in USAID funding? Remember the COVID dashboard shown on TV 24/7 to instill utter fear in us as the COVID cases rose? I would bet money in Vegas that USAID money funded that. Now they are laying off over 2,000 workers because of the reported funding cuts. Geez, I hope this quoted doctor isn’t one of them (sarcasm noted).
The MSM is making sure that we all know the vast majority of recent measles cases are in unvaccinated children. At this juncture of the media war, it is important to look back at those initial headlines about the Texas girl. As we learned in the COVID gaslighting, there is a difference between dying “from measles” and dying “with measles”. And the MSM knows it. Sure, there were a few headlines that stated this child died from measles (they don’t know that for sure), but the majority of headlines said the child “died during the West Texas measles outbreak.” See how they do it? That’s like saying, “I ate lunch during the Presidential inauguration.” It insinuates I was invited to a swanky Trump lunch, but in reality means that I ate a sandwich on my couch while watching the inauguration on television.
Here is another headline: What are measles parties? Are they tied to Texas outbreak? What to know as cases spike. This article is dated February 20 and its focus is of course to prevent people from naturally exposing their children to measles. The first line is literally this: “Measles parties? There’s no confirmed link to the outbreak in West Texas…”
Honestly, this whole article is garbage, but what do you expect from a “journalist” named Brandi with an “I” and who graduated less than two years ago from college? I am sorry, I was busting at the seams to say that.
Here is another stellar sentence from Brandi: “Most of those infected are unvaccinated or have an unknown vaccination status, though four cases have been reported in people who say they were vaccinated.” In other words, we don’t know crap about what we’re talking about. I mean seriously, read that sentence a couple of times.
Reality Check
This sentence sums up the reality: “Before the measles vaccine introduction in 1963, it is thought that millions of Americans contracted the disease annually, and several hundred died. While measles was declared eliminated in the US in 2000, outbreaks persist each year.” Several points: (1) “it is thought” but we really don’t know for sure whether millions got it and hundreds died and (2) if we declared it eliminated in 2000 and outbreaks persist, isn’t this proof that the vaccines don’t stop the disease? Sound familiar? Remember the COVID pivot and “breakthrough” infections? All of a sudden, the vaccines lessened the severity but didn’t prevent COVID. And none of these articles mention the harms of the MMR vaccine, like Dr. Tenpenny does in her MMR book.
In 2024, there were 285 measles cases in a country of over 350 million people, and one overrun by unchecked illegal immigrants at that. According to the CDC’s own data, prior to the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963, there were 3 to 4 million infections per year and an estimated 400-500 related deaths (roughly 0.013%), most of whom were severely malnourished or had other health conditions.
Dr. Tenpenny did a deep dive into the latest hype, explaining that for the vast majority of people, measles is a rash, fever, cough, some diarrhea, maybe a little conjunctivitis, and a bit of skin peeling, particularly on the hands. “The measles vaccine cut down on the incidence rate of measles because it stopped transmission,” Tenpenny admits, “but it really didn’t really do anything to change the death rate, which was always very low.”
RFK Jr. continues to be an advocate of letting the science speak. The problem is that all the science isn’t considered, instead squelched from the light of day by Big Pharma for its inconvenient truths. In his meticulously referenced book Vax-Unvax: Let the Science Speak, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. writes: “Although vaccination protected against vaccine-preventable infectious diseases such as pertussis and measles, vaccinated children had a far greater incidence of behavioral issues, seizures, loss of consciousness, antibiotic use, and hospital visits, among others.” The book goes on to detail the dramatically increased rates of autism, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, allergies, and—yes—death (particularly when combined with the DTP vaccine) in children who received measles vaccines compared to those who didn’t.
Let’s focus on the truth, and focus on what really matters. Instead of falling for the hype of articles by Brandi, we should be focusing on credible science like Jon Fleetwood’s report that the measles vaccine development could be classified as gain-of-function (GOF) research, backed up by other credible people and a peer-reviewed journal publication written by biodefense experts. Now that’s worth reading and understanding.
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Fed Up Texas Chick is a contributing writer for The Tenpenny Report. She’s a rocket scientist turned writer, having worked in the space program for many years. She is a seasoned medical writer and researcher who is fighting for medical freedom for all of us through her work.