Phony success rates

Faked data

Widening vaccine scandal

(NaturalNews) In case you hadn't heard, there is something going on at the Harvard University campus that isn't supposed to happen: There is a widening outbreak of mumps, and all the students who have contracted the disease thus far had already been vaccinated for the disease.As reported by, the most recent mumps outbreak began with a whimper in February, after two students were confirmed to have developed the disease. But within a few weeks, the number grew to 16, then 30, and now there are about 40 students with confirmed cases of mumps.Dr. Paul J. Barreira, director of the Massachusetts university's health services, told the student newspaper that the rise in cases is disconcerting."I'm actually more concerned now than I was during any time of the outbreak," Barreira told . "I'm desperate to get students to take seriously that they shouldn't be infecting one another."What's more, it doesn't appear as though Harvard and local medical officials think the outbreak will be controlled anytime soon, as Barreira warned that the school's May 26 commencement may be affected."If there's a spike this week, that means those students expose others, so now we're looking at a potential serious interruption to commencement for students," Barreira told the student newspaper. "Students will get infected and then go into isolation."None of what is happening at Harvard – and the school's panicked response to it – is surprising, though no doubt millions of Americans hearing about the story are scratching their heads in confusion. Why? Because vaccines, we have had drummed into our heads for years by Big Pharma and government drug pushers Only they don't, quite obviously. Maybe it's because vaccines – especially the MMR (mumps, measles and rubella) vaccines – really don't deliver as promised."The CDC claims the mumps vaccine is 76 to 95 percent effective, but they offer no scientific evidence whatsoever to support that claim. To date, there has never been a randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled study published on the mumps vaccine in humans. The so-called 'scientific' evidence supporting these vaccines is purely imaginary," wrote Mike Adams, the Health Ranger and editor ofThat claim was borne out a few years later, when he reported that two Merck scientists who filed a False Claims Act complaint in 2010 – a complaint which has just now been unsealed – accused vaccine manufacturer Merck of knowingly falsifying its mumps vaccine test data, spiking blood samples with animal antibodies, selling a vaccine that actuallymumps and measles outbreaks, and ripping off governments and consumers who bought the vaccine thinking it was "95% effective."As per the former Merck virologists, Stephen Krahling and Joan Wlochowski, the company engaged in the following misconduct:-- Merck knowingly falsified its mumps vaccine test results to fabricate a "95% efficacy rate."-- In order to do this, Merckin order to artificially inflate the appearance of immune system antibodies.And, as reported byIn January 2015, Adams reported further that the court documents filed by the Merck virologists revealed additional shocking information, namely: