After spending more than twelve years reading the history of vaccinations and studying scores of Georgian, Victorian and twentieth-century original evidence and documents I was frankly shocked to find that there is in fact very little evidence that our cherished belief in vaccinations is well-founded. In fact, very disappointingly most of the evidence is to the contrary. I, like most of us, before I examined the evidence for myself believed that we were saved from such hideous diseases as smallpox by the 'discovery' of vaccination back in 1774 when the first known vaccinator bravely applied the story of the dairymaids when he deliberately infected his wife and two of his children with cowpox in a field in Dorset. This did serve to provide protection for a limited time in many cases, but Jenner's attempt to apply this to a system of mass vaccination ushered in what was known as 'the slaughter of the innocents' for the next hundred years. It was a world-wide disaster that is today ignored where about 80% of those who contracted smallpox had been successfully vaccinated and, according to the official medical literature were five times more likely to die of it than the unvaccinated. The situation did not improve during the next century either as evidenced by articles in the BMJ and Lancet and elsewhere. Today, of course, we have much anecdotal evidence that indiscriminate and excessive vaccinations with their adjuvants can cause/trigger autoimmune diseases in the vulnerable, including ME, although this putative association is firmly denied by the industry and our governments. So far from further vaccines protecting us against ME, based on the evidence of the last two hundred years, they may actually exacerbate the situation.
The moral of the vaccination story is not to believe popular propaganda churned out by interested parties but do your own research and decide for yourself. The truth might give you a shock.