that’s not true, according to health canada. as of oct. 1, health canada said it has had reports of 17,982 adverse events — that’s 0.032 per cent of the 56.15 million doses given or one in 3,122. of those, 4,675 (0.008 per cent or one in 12,000) were considered serious.
roberts’s distrust of medical doctors and pharmaceutical medications dates to when he was 20 and had tonsillitis. he told readers that he cured himself by refusing to take medication, letting the infection take its course, allowing his body to build immunity to it and maintaining a healthy lifestyle ever since.
it’s a compelling narrative except for the embedded belief that there is nothing that clean living and eating well can’t cure. polio, diabetes, malaria and even cancer disprove that narrative.
just to be clear, i’m not suggesting that common ground should be banned or censored. that said, if shop owners decide that they no longer want to provide free space on a shelf for common ground, i’m certainly not going to name or shame them.
if anything, common ground is a useful tool for gaining a more nuanced picture of anti-vaxxers.
far from all being overweight, poorly educated, gun-toting, religious rubes from the prairies who vote for the people’s party of canada, they may be as likely to be vegans in nelson, eco-warriors with crystals and kitsilano moms with yoga mats tucked under their arms.