From its inception Health Freedom Idaho (HFI) was created to preserve Idahoans’ health care freedoms.
All around us, states are battling the removal of exemptions. Amid such medical tyranny, parents are fleeing the vaccine extremism as medical refugees. As we discuss the situation with health freedom state leaders, so many regret that they did not get LOUD earlier. We at Health Freedom Idaho heed this as a warning.
Make sure your state legislators know that you support vaccine exemption laws that will keep us all protected from liability-free medical products via vaccine mandates. The legislators must leave this session hearing from the citizens who desire freedom of choice for healthcare.
Senate Health Committee
COPY THIS LIST AND PASTE IT INTO THE BCC field of your email. This will send the email to everyone on the list/committee.
At this link, the Health and Welfare Committee Meeting Minutes and past meetings can be view. Typically they meet at 8:30 a.m. in Room EW20
https://youtu.be/Ap0wWz6ymyc
WHERE THERE IS RISK, THERE MUST BE CHOICE
The vaccine information sheet given by your pediatrician is NOT the actual manufacture’s vaccine insert and omits critical information. The actual inserts are 12-20 pages long and list several warnings and adverse reactions, which include seizures, encephalopathy and death 9.
Vaccine ingredients include Thimerosal, aluminum, formaldehyde, MSG, acetone, glycerin, lead, yeast, animal DNA, unidentified animal viruses, polysorbate 80, and aborted human fetal tissue (diploid cells and DNA fragments)10.
It’s not known how these neurotoxins, animals, and aborted human DNA affect our immune systems. 16
Autism rates were 1 in 2,500 in 1985 and are now 1 in 45. Currently, 27% of children are chronically ill; 1 in 6 children have learning disabilities, 1 in 10 have ADHD, 1 in 13 have food allergies, 1 in 10 have asthma, 1 in 20 have seizures. It is estimated that 33% of childhood illnesses are caused by environmental exposure11. There is also a rise in childhood cancers, autoimmune disorders such as Type 1 Diabetes, Juvenile RA and Lupus11.
Vaccine targeted diseases often occur in vaccinated individuals.
This happens because the vaccine’s effectiveness wanes quickly, the virus mutates from the vaccine strain or because some individuals are non-responders. Live virus vaccines such as MMR, Varicella, Rotavirus, Shingles and live flu vaccines can shed and spread the infection to others for up to 6 weeks after vaccination12.
90% of morbidity and mortality from both vaccine targeted diseases and non-vaccine targeted diseases declined at the same rate before mass vaccinations were implemented13.
Better sanitation, hygiene, nutrition, and clean water have had themost significantt effect on overall disease prevention before vaccines were routinely used. Vaccines are classified as “biologics” – not pharmaceutical drugs. Vaccines are not required to be tested using long-term, double blind placebo-controlled studies.14
Instead of using inert placebo controls, vaccines are tested using aluminum adjuvants and/or other vaccines as the ‘controls’ in safety trials. Neither an aluminum adjuvant nor a comparator vaccine qualifies as a placebo. No valid safety claims can be made for any individual vaccine, and the ‘CDC schedule in its entirety’ has never been tested for safety or efficacy. 15
The vaccine schedule has tripled, from 1986 to 2019, to 74 doses of 16 vaccines by age 181. Many of these vaccines are given in combination with others. There have been no studies to support the safety and effectiveness of vaccine combinations. The National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act2 indemnified vaccine makers and physicians from ALL liability when injury or death occurs following vaccination. US law regards vaccines as UNAVOIDABLY UNSAFE3.
Adverse reactions that do get compensated come from the Vaccine Injury Compensation program are funded by a $0.75 tax per vaccine paid for by patients4.
Over $4 billion has been paid out for vaccine injuries and deaths5. The CDC estimates that the reporting of adverse reactions from vaccines to the CDC/FDA Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) is only 1 to 10% of the actual number of incidents6,7.
Given these estimates, there are possibly 300,000 to 2 million adverse reactions annually8
Reaching out to our legislators is critical as they go to vote on bills this session. Here is an easy to cut and paste list for our representatives. Due to spam filters that the Capitol has, we have to send our emails out in the group of a dozen or fewer names. Copy and paste your email and send the same email to ALL the legislators in EACH group.
During the legislative session, HFI will send out Action Alerts requesting you contact your representative on proposed legislation. This will often involve a quick phone call or simple email. This shouldn’t be the only time you are in contact with your legislator. Taking time to develop a relationship with your elected official off season will allow you the opportunity develop an open line of communication based on mutual respect.
How to Write Your Legislator
Elected officials care what their mail says. A logical, courteous letter carries weight; it can change a legislator’s mind, particularly when the legislator is wavering on an issue. It is important that your message be written as effectively as possible. Here are a few points:
Keep it brief. Be as brief as possible, but don’t sacrifice clarity and completeness. Two pages is a maximum but one page is best. While form letters tend to be easy to use it better to use your own words. HFI will always present you with key ideas and a sample letter to help you create a personalized letter.
Identify yourself. Let your legislators know that you live and/or work in their district.
Keep it focused. Limit the correspondence to one subject. Otherwise, you decrease the force of your argument and complicate your legislator’s efforts to act.
Get to the point. State your purpose at the outset and use the remainder of the letter to expand your views. Create a simple bullet pointed list within the first paragraph of the reasons you are for/against proposed legislation. Be constructive suggesting alternatives or better solutions, if possible. Use a simple bulleted pointed list to make it easy for the legislator to identify your points. A few strong, well thought out points will be more influential than a long laundry list of reasons.
Use facts. Issues you write about may be emotion-laden, but beware of the nonfactual argument. It will make your legislator less willing to consider your point next time, too.
Relate it to home. Emphasize the effect of the legislation in question on your legislator’s own constituency districts. Give facts and illustrations – use your own knowledge and experience to inform the legislator. Legislators seldom change their decisions because of a philosophical argument but well-reasoned examples carry tremendous weight.
Provide background as needed. Don’t assume that a legislator is as well informed as you about a problem. A legislator can’t keep abreast of everything. Explain the situation, what you think and why.
Make specific recommendations.
Keep it positive. Your attitude is important. A polite, positive-sounding letter is more likely to impress than one that is negative, rude, or threatening. Avoid being antagonistic. Point out the benefits of your position.
Close with a friendly appeal, regardless of the action you urge. Thank them for their help and consideration. “Sincerely,” is an appropriate closing.
Allow for follow-up. Include contact information and offer to act as a resource should the legislator (or staff) have questions or need additional information. Include your full name, address, your district (find your district here – https://legislature.idaho.gov/who’smylegislator.htm), Where appropriate, indicate in the letter that you will follow up with a phone call