Forrest Maready Profile picture
Mar 26, 2019 24 tweets 11 min read Read on X
In this thread, I'm going to present a collection songs, comics, and advertisements showing how no one really cared or worried about a #measles infection before the vaccine came out. Image
This doll let girls simulate measles or chickenpox infections. Strange they would do that for a disease that people were so terrified of. Were they just ignorant? ImageImage
Here's a cute song sung by Cab Calloway's daughter, Lael, about her measles infection right at Christmas. She wasn't worried about measles but Santa NOT visiting her—that is, unless he had already had #measles.

They knew it conferred a lifetime of immunity, unlike vaccines.
Cartoons frequently used these childhood illnesses as comic fodder. In this strip, Virgil says he wants to go visit his "enemies." Why? Because he has a measles infection. Infecting someone with #measles was treated almost like a prank, a joke to play on someone. Strange! Image
In this "Mugs and Skeeter" comic strip, they make light of nearly every trivial childhood illness. Does it look like they were terrified of a #measles infection?

Ask yourself, why are we more afraid now that we have a vaccine for it? Image
Two children reminisce about their school pictures with spots all over their face. So terrified of #measles back then! Image
Measles was often more lamented for the quarantine it warranted than any effects from the illness itself. Image
Measles was even credited with saving a boy's life. Not only were these people not afraid of #measles, they purposefully infected their child with it.

The potential of immunotherapy is just now being recognized. Image
Here's a frame from the infamous Brady Bunch Measles episode. This isn't a vaccine chart—it's an immunity chart. They're checking off these illnesses because their children will never have to worry about catching them (or spreading them) ever again.

Vaccines require boosters. Image
Another child writes a letter to the editor about missing out on the Christmas concert because he had #measles. Not a word about the illness, symptoms, fears, or anything other than disappointment at missing the concert—a common theme. Image
In this Donald Duck comic strip, they joke about someone who had #measles and mumps at the same time.

Why were they so unafraid of these infections before vaccines were available? Image
Prince Charles, age 12, and heir to the Royal Throne, gets #measles.

"...it is expected the illness will run its usual course."

Why weren't they terrified? Image
In "Gordo," this father-to-be shows fright at a list of childhood diseases. His wife, who knows better, steadies his nerve. Image
In this 1956 "Etta Kett" strip, they make light of how many people one person was able to infect with measles.

How could they laugh at such a serious disease? Were they ignorant to what was going on before their very eyes? Image
Quarantine was a monotonous reality of a measles outbreak, but in this 1956 "Smokey Stover" strip, making fun of someone's measles isolation was fair game.

Does this seem like a disease people were seriously afraid of? Image
In this episode of the Walter's, the youngest thinks her sister's boyfriend has the measles and asks for him to be sent home. Back then, people knew how to recognize the signs of measles and valued isolation and quarantine—of those who were infected. Image
In this 1960s "Life's Like That," they joke about how one boy infected the whole class—including the teacher.

Was humor just a coping mechanism for a terrifying disease they had no answers for? Were they just ignorant?

Or was it they didn't fear measles before the vaccine? Image
Telling 1961 article about German measles (Rubella) and pregnancy. The main reason we vaccinate for Rubella is to protect women from the illness during pregnancy, when it can cause problems with the baby.

Before the vaccine, doctors tried to comfort & minimize the dangers. Image
Here's another article about Rubella from the SAME doctor, just over ten years later in 1972—AFTER a Rubella vaccine was available.

Notice how differently he describes Rubella from the previous article. Rather than comforting pregnant women, he now creates fear & panic. ImageImage
Same doctor again in 1973, TWO years after the Rubella vaccine was licensed. Notice the shift in tone. An even more blatant attempt to terrify—this time much more succinct.

Many diseases follow this exact pattern:

"Don't be concerned" before the vaccine.
"Be terrified" after. ImageImage
Once the fear-mongering has died down, doctors often enter Phase 2 of vaccine propoganda: Promises of eradication.

This article was written in 1984, imploring the continued use of the Rubella vaccine not due to fear, but a civic duty to help eradicate a terrible disease. Image
Here's a 1963 article about the new measles vaccine. Because there was so little fear of a measles infection, many went straight to Phase 2: promises of eradication.

Note how confident they were the polio vaccine would eradicate polio, just years after its introduction. Image
Here's a Peanuts comic strip from 1967, after the measles vaccine became available.

Linus complains the doctor thinks he's a dart board because he's getting too many shots.

Wonder what he'd think of the 800 shots a child gets today? Image
Another 1967 Peanuts comic strip where Linus shows a lack of fear about measles. Lucy, ever the bossy, annoying "fussbudget," lets her brother know what she thinks.

Don't be a Lucy. Be a Linus. Image

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More from @forrestmaready

Dec 4, 2023
1. If you are a Christian, what you were taught about the Trinity is probably wrong. It’s one of the most commonly misunderstood things about the Christian faith. I want to share a few things about the Trinity to help clear some things up. Image
2. The Trinity is kind of like “vaccines” of the science world. No one can really explain it. You’re not allowed to question it. And if you ask for evidence of it, no one can seem to find anything definitive. Image
3. A few years ago, I started asking questions about the Trinity at church. The answers I got—and the way they were given to me—started to feel real familiar.
Read 40 tweets
Jun 7, 2023
Exactly 5 years ago I published a book I hoped might change the world in a tiny way. It wasn't my first book, but it felt like it might be my most important.

I'd always wondered where polio came from. It was nearly unheard of until the 1890s. Then, seemingly out of nowhere...
In the 1890s, polio began to appear in the US. What would've caused this dreaded disease, once unknown, to become so much more prevalent than before?

For years, I’d heard about a supposed connection with DDT, the pesticide that began being used shortly after World War 2.
Some of the DDT/polio connections made sense, while others seemed farfetched. The biggest problem with DDT? It wasn’t used in the US until after World War 2. Image
Read 21 tweets
Jan 14, 2023
If you’re a mother, or are thinking of having children, I want to share 9 tiny stories from history about doctors, medicine, mothers, and their children.

Please read this before you trust a single thing they say.
Throughout the 1800s, doctors believed “dentition,” or teething, was an extremely dangerous time for infants. All sorts of horrible diseases could enter their body. Their remedy? Mercury teething powders. Given to hundreds of thousands of infants—the original source of “polio.”
Around the same time, women giving birth in hospitals would have their babies delivered by doctors who refused to wash their hands—doctors who’d just performed autopsies & other gruesome procedures. The result? Thousands of women died while doctors insisted it wasn’t their fault.
Read 15 tweets
Dec 31, 2022
My top 22 epiphanies, realizations, reluctant admissions, and random thoughts for 2022.

Let me know if I've left something important out!

Here they are (plus a few extras perhaps), in no particular order:
1. Hypocrisy isn’t a sign of mental weakness. It’s a sign of strength—a sign someone thinks they’re winning & can get their way on anything, no matter the irrationality.

Pointing out hypocrisy is just highlighting the side that’s winning.

Find some hypocrisy in your life today!
2. Email is still the best project management tool there is. It has search. It works as file storage. You can sort and organize. Everyone knows how to use it.

There are a bunch of other project management tools out there, but nothing beats email for flexibility and ease of use.
Read 24 tweets
Dec 10, 2022
As a hated, outspoken anti-vaxxer for the past six or seven years, I feel compelled to share a few thoughts on the coronavirus vaccine now that it appears a bit safer to talk honestly about.

(thread)
For those of you who got the vaccine (and regret it), I am truly sorry. I have no ill will towards you and want to work together towards undoing/fixing whatever these vaccines have done.
Just like you, I was pro-vaccine at one point in my life.

Just like you, something happened that changed me.
Read 17 tweets
Oct 27, 2022
@benshapiro, a conservative thinker famous for pushing COVID vaccines on his followers, recently had a dramatic change of heart.

A stark U-turn like this is what we call a “teachable moment.” I’m hoping he (& others similarly duped) might continue this lesson a moment longer...
In a rare act of contrition, Ben Shapiro admitted he & many others were fooled about COVID vaccines b/c he was lied to by people he was supposed to have been able to trust.

Does he think COVID is the only vaccine-related lie that’s ever been told?

bit.ly/3sBYiss
It would behoove Ben Shapiro and you and humanity to spend a moment reflecting on what you “believe” because others insist something is true about vaccines.

There are things you STILL feel unnecessary to question about vaccines but should take another look at.
Read 14 tweets

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