Pamphlets - Homoeopathic: Vaccination, compulsory medicine1907 |
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Alfred Russel Wallace alleged allopathic animal anti-vaccinationist army attacked authorities bacillus bacteriologists Board of Health body cause cent cination claim Commission compulsory vaccination confluent contagion cow-pox dangerous death-rate deaths diphtheria doctors effect of vaccine eminent Empire of Japan England epidemic eruption evidence experience fact fatal fever glycerinized homoeopathic Homœopathy hospital human hygiene ignorance immunity infection inoculation Iowa J. W. HODGE Japan Jenner Leicester London matter medical profession medicine ment mitigation mortality never NIAGARA FALLS nurses occurred official patient period physician poison population practice of vaccination preventive vaccination Prof propagating prophylactic protection proved pustules quoted re-vaccination records result Ruata sanitary science sanitation says scarification scientific smallpox susceptible syphilis tetanus theory thousands tion treatment typhoid fever unvaccinated vaccinated persons vaccination has long vaccine lymph vaccine operation vaccine virus vaccinists Variolinum varioloid variolous Wallace Wonderful Century zymotic disease
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Page 4 - The right of personal security consists in a person's legal and uninterrupted enjoyment of his life, his limbs, his body, his health, and his reputation.
Page 4 - ... certain rule of living, reduced to this conclusion, that instead of the arbitrary power of a king, we must submit to the arbitrary power of a house of commons? If this be true, what benefit do we derive from the exchange ? Tyranny, my lords, is detestable in every shape ; but in none so formidable as when it is assumed and exercised by a number of tyrants.
Page 11 - Army and Navy, the conclusion is in every case the same: that vaccination is a gigantic delusion; that it has never saved a single life; but that it has been the cause of so much disease, so many deaths, such a vast amount of utterly needless and altogether undeserved suffering, that it will be classed by the coming generation among the greatest errors of an ignorant and prejudiced age, and its penal enforcement the foulest blot on the generally beneficent course of legislation during our century.