The fakery of Rabies shots for your pets..it’s big Pharma cashing in on fear they create

Submitted by SteveZ

Just a few years after the rabies immunization for dogs became available, in 1983 they released the movie “Cujo” that had Americans scared half to death of their dog becoming rabid and turning on them. Let’s put aside “rabies” for one moment and look at the system that billionaire funders of big pharma and policymakers quickly put into place. They made the vaccine mandatory, assigned an ID tag that dogs must wear, stored the information and address of the dog and its owner in a database, informed healthcare, retail, park services, and businesses that they should not provide services to those without this ID. If one doesn’t abide by this law, the owner can be fined, dog quarantined and force-vaccinated.

The system they are creating for human beings has long been tested on pet owners of dogs, and most dogs are even chipped. It is also being run through the livestock industry via RFID tags, which Corey’s Digs previously reported on. They want every living being tracked and controlled because ultimately, we are all livestock to them. Just as they are running obedience training PreK-Adult throughout the entire education system and beyond, they are doing the same obedience training through vaccine ID passports.

Now I know what you’re thinking. “But, but, rabies is truly dangerous and life threatening, making these laws justifiable.” As far back as 2008, a study showed that half of the puppies and kittens in the U.S. were not even being vaccinated at all, and trends have shown that more and more people have either completely stopped the rabies shot or are not doing follow-up shots because studies have proven that one shot provides immunization for up to 6 years, not just 3 years. There are over 90 million dogs inhabiting 63 million households in the U.S. with only 60-70 annually contracting rabies. According to the CDC, wild animals that carry rabies, such as bats, raccoons, skunks, and foxes, account for 5,000 annual cases in the U.S., with just 60-70 dogs contracting it. Of those dogs who contract it, there is less than 1 dog bite of humans annually. In a 58-year stretch, between 1960-2018, there have only been 127 cases of humans contracting rabies, of which 70% were from bat bites.

So I ask, if nearly half the country has limited or forgone the rabies shot for their dog, do these numbers above reflect a significant risk? This isn’t to say that pet owners should forgo the rabies shot altogether, but if they choose that option, should there be a law in place that bans them from access to healthcare and other services for their dog? Should there be fines, quarantines, and forced vaccination? They have tested this system on pet owners for years, and half the U.S. population willingly went along with this without even questioning it. Sound familiar?

Whereas, there are some states allowing for a Titer test to determine if there are still antibodies in the dog to forgo a follow-up rabies shot, that option is scarce. And whereas, there are scientific studies proving it provides much longer immunity, states and establishments don’t seem to be taking that scientific evidence into account. Meanwhile, adverse events, and in some cases death, after receiving the rabies jab have become a grave concern for pet owners, leaving them feeling backed in a corner, much like the Covid-19 jab mandates.

When we take a look at Covid cases, it is the same pattern, only on a grander scale and with a much less life-threatening issue, with the main difference being the complete and utter exaggeration of the “virus” and case counts. So are lockdowns, mask mandates, mandatory jabs and boosters, vaccine ID passports being the only way in to restaurants and businesses, and mass scale data collection, justifiable, or have they done far more harm than good?

They are treating you like a dog, and they didn’t even show dogs the respect they deserve. You are nothing more than livestock to them. Do you want to be treated this way? Do you want your entire existence and that of your children’s to be controlled? Dogs may not be able to fight back, but we sure can.

by Dana Scott

What Every Vet (And Owner) Should Know About Dog Vaccines

vaccines

Are you confused about how often your dog needs vaccines? You’re not alone … your vet probably is too.

At Dogs Naturally vaccine frequency is the number one question we’re asked about. And it’s a good question …. because, as you’ll find out, most dogs are being vaccinated too often.

And that’s dangerous for your dog.

Core Vaccines For Dogs

Let’s look at core dog vaccines and what the research says about how often they should be given.

But before we do, you should first understand that the core vaccines for dogs (parvovirus, distemper and adenovirus) are not required by law. The only dog vaccine that’s legally required in all US states and some (not all) Canadian provinces is rabies.

So other than rabies, nobody can force you to vaccinate your dog with any other vaccine you don’t want to give.

Period.

This is a decision best left up to you and your vet. But before you discuss vaccination with your vet … read on to make sure you know the duration of immunity of those vaccines – and the potentially lethal consequences of over-vaccinating.

Because most vets don’t know how long vaccines protect your dog. (Don’t worry, we’ve got a handout you can share with your vet at the bottom of this post).

Research Into Core Dog Vaccines

When it comes to immunity and duration of immunity for core dog vaccines, there’s one clear expert. Before his recent retirement, Dr Ronald D Schultz was one of three or four researchers looking at how long protection from veterinary vaccines actually lasts – and he did these studies over a 40 year period.

In fact, it’s Dr Schultz’s work that prompted the AAHA (American Animal Hospital Association) and AVMA (American Veterinary Medical Association) to re-evaluate their vaccine schedules.

Back in 2003, the American Animal Hospital Association Canine Vaccine Taskforce warned vets that:

Misunderstanding, misinformation and the conservative nature of our profession have largely slowed adoption of protocols advocating decreased frequency of vaccination’; ‘Immunological memory provides durations of immunity for core infectious diseases that far exceed the traditional recommendations for annual vaccination.

This is supported by a growing body of veterinary information  as well-developed epidemiological vigilance in human medicine that indicates immunity induced by vaccination is extremely long lasting and, in most cases, lifelong.

Dr Ronald Schultz And Dog Vaccine Guidelines

“The recommendation for annual re-vaccination is a practice that was officially started in 1978.”  said Dr Schultz.

This recommendation was made without any scientific validation of the need to booster immunity so frequently. In fact the presence of good humoral antibody levels blocks the anamnestic response to vaccine boosters just as maternal antibody blocks the response in some young animals.”

He added:  “The patient receives no benefit and may be placed at serious risk when an unnecessary vaccine is given. Few or no scientific studies have demonstrated a need for cats or dogs to be revaccinated.

Yet … despite the AAHA’s 2003 comments, they haven’t made any real progress in changing protocols. Their most recent (2017) recommendations are still very tentative:

“Following completion of the Initial Vaccination series and the initial booster dose, MLV and Recombinant Core vaccines will provide a sustained protective response lasting beyond 3 yr.”

This is a very conservative recommendation when you consider the results of the duration of immunity research Dr Schultz and his colleagues did on more than 1,000 dogs, for every major dog vaccine.

Two types of results are in the chart below: “challenge” (meaning exposure to the real virus) and serology (meaning antibody titer results) …

immunity time frame for dog vaccinations

And these numbers show the MINIMUM duration of immunity. The ceilings reflect not the duration of immunity, but the duration of the studies. In other words, if the studies had gone on longer, the research could have shown longer protection … and according to Dr Schultz, possibly for life.

Here’s what Dr Schultz explained …

“It is important to understand that these are minimum DOI’s and longer studies have not been done with certain of the above products. It is possible that some or all of these products will provide lifelong immunity.

In 2010, he published the following results on studies with newer generation, recombinant vaccines:

vaccine protection chart

It’s important to note that not only did the vaccines provide protection for a minimum of 4 to 5 years … but they protected 100% of the dogs tested.

Dog Vaccines: The Dangers

Why is it important to understand Dr Schultz’s work? Because your dog’s vaccines can create very real health problems.

Dog vaccines must be given only when necessary. Every vaccine has the potential to kill the patient or create debilitating chronic diseases including cancer and allergies. Here’s a list of potential adverse vaccine reactions, according to Dr Schultz, based on his research.

common reactions to dog vaccines
moderate reactions to dog vaccines
severe reactions to dog vaccines

And this is what vaccine damage looks like

With many thanks to Patricia Jordan DVM for her photos.

Pictures of dogs with vaccine reactions

Dr Schultz summarizes his 40-plus years of research with the following:

“Only one dose of the modified-live canine ‘core’ vaccine (against CDV, CAV-2 and CPV-2) or modified-live feline ‘core’ vaccine (against FPV, FCV and FHV), when administered at 16 weeks or older, will provide long lasting (many years to a lifetime) immunity in a very high percentage of animals.”

But the problem is, many vets are ignoring this research. If your vet is vaccinating your dog every year – or even every three years – he’s vaccinating too much! Your dog is already protected by vaccines he’s had as a young dog … and any additional vaccine will give him all of the risk with no benefit.

Protect Your Dog From Disease AND From Vaccine Damage

It’s critical to understand that we need to protect our dogs and cats not just from infectious disease, but also from vaccine damage. And in recent years that’s become a lot easier (and a lot cheaper) …

Titer tests are blood tests that can tell you whether your dog has responded to his vaccines and acquired immunity.

In the past, it’s been difficult (and expensive) to get titer testing done. But for the past few years, vet clinics have had the ability to offer inexpensive in-house titer testing (Vaccicheck and TiterCHEK).

With access to in-house titer testing, there’s never any reason to give any cat or dog over the age of 16 weeks another vaccine without a negative titer test first. So vets don’t have to GUESS at when to re-vaccinate. And with access to these in-house tests, you shouldn’t have to pay high fees to get a titer test for your dog.

But despite these new advances, vets continue to guess anyway … or give vaccines “just in case.” And many clinics still don’t offer these in-house titer tests. So most vets still vaccinate every three years (or even every year in some cases) … and they’re reluctant to use titer tests to avoid potential vaccine-induced health issues.

DNM RECOMMENDS: If you vaccinate your dog, give him Four Leaf Rover’s Protect to balance his gut after vaccination, It’s an everyday soil-based probiotic that contains ingredients that can help remove toxins and heavy metals from his body.

You and your dog rely on your vet to make the right decisions when it comes to vaccines. So please download this printable PDF and discuss it with your vet BEFORE you vaccinate your dog again.

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18 Comments
i forget
i forget
April 21, 2023 8:01 pm

Old Yeller. Wasn’t The Coward of the County.

Spoke to a groomer one time. Sort of an interview, of our dog. Got to the end ~ we were gonna get hired! ~ & she asks if our girl’s is up to date, with paperwork proof, on rabies vax. Missed it by *that* much.

I asked if she thought we were living with a rabid dog, & would actually be looking for her to be groomed in that case. Part of her never Get Smart answer was “it’s policy.”

No vax for scaries, or crybrabies. Can’t put the afflicted out of misery either

i forget
i forget
  i forget
April 22, 2023 5:38 pm

Ha. Didn’t use to need to warn wo/man’s best friend not to bend over for the soap when she goes out for a bath & a coatcut. Sad signs of the times some might say. But.

I was always a best man or a groomsman – never a groom. Once each was twice more than enough (& 3rd time charm was never going to catch me). But I was younger then.

Management slot grooming turned out to have some commonalities with certain communal showering milieus involving bending over for the soap (I imagine). But I was younger still, then.

Even younger still I was a “groomsman” to a horse that nobody had ridden in years. And the last ones I’d ridden were spring-loaded & a plastic head on a stick, respectively. So of course, a half-wild horse being a horse, I very quickly learned about being a horsefly. And the tricks of flying dismounts. Well, one dismount. From a pommel-less, stirrup-less, saddle-less horse. Very gymnastic down on the farm. Khaneman wrote one “Thinking, Fast & Slow.” Didn’t read it. Have read, continue to read – it’s a multi-volume set – Learning, At A Gallop & Crash, tho.

Fun & games & ‘reality’-weaving with words, & images, & music.

“What if” “sad signs of the times” merely means you’re in the middle of a thick intervention by the signage-makers union (tribe)?

And “what if” that intervention did indeed intervene? Cue the one, you know the one, by The Five Man Electrical Band. No more dirty dancing for you. The signs say “I got ya! uh-huh-huh!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMefxH9Z_yQ

The new muse’ic tries, but the elders (ones that ain’t gelders) will always have that much more gallop & crash under their belts.

Reservoir’s got a Dog in it, but, not the right kind, so:

Gary Wright. Dream Weaver. Always liked it. But often, after seeing this, when I hear it, the hot tub memory scene, sad scene, accompanies minds eye:

There’s limitless positivity-propulsion to be found in the reality of the negative polarity of, that is, in the main, people.

The black goo that bubbled up & oozed used to swallow dinosaurs, Archaeopteryx, & lower property values, until it didn’t.

So tarbaby’s a trap, or a demerit-discount, or it’s a source of light, heat & much else besides, depending on the matches-synapses – & the surrounds (luckluck&moreluck) – ya got @conception.

The way to do anything, race, build a business, play music, sing a song, write, fight ∞ is your way.

Catering, or copying, is slavery is the way of the many, the your-way-less, the weus.

Taking advice is a close second.

Giving it is third.

Two & three *have* caught me – Trojans are trickier that half-wild. But dismountin’s a must.

This mountain’s a must.

“Been to a town.”

Rah-rah pep rallies & cumbayah is false positivity. That stuff’ll never be a Marisa, or even a ’63 Pontiac Tempest.

But +polarity fur-person pawsitvity, that’s real.

And the bachelor says, “I’ll be your laurel berry.”

And an extension of what an ‘old soul in a kids body’ said might be: grooms that fuck around find out.

Or not. It goes how it goes. And how it goes isn’t known until it’s gone. Que sera. Nietzsche knew that, & a few other things.

Waste not want not abyss not unless you’re sure you’re not going to have to climb down & retrieve some waste not.

“If one can possess a piece of the demi-god’s power – an autograph, a watch, a ring – one will somehow live forever. It’s not about “trusting the science” but about believing in the magic.

Newman’s daughters who have pushed this sale, as well as a new documentary, The Last Movie Stars, and the memoir Paul Newman: The Extraordinary Life of an Ordinary Man – compiled from their father’s transcripts of conversations with his friend, Stewart Stern, over thirty years ago – have done something supremely ironic. On one hand, they are selling their father’s and mother’s memorabilia, allegedly to tell their stories, through things that are fetishes for those desperate for holy secular relics, while at the same time publishing a book in which Paul honestly knocks himself off the pedestal and says he was always an insecure guy, numbed by his childhood and the false face Hollywood created for him. In other words, an ordinary man with talent who was very successful in Hollywood’s dream factory, where illusions are the norm.

“I was my mother’s Pinocchio, the one that went wrong,” he tells us right away, leading us to the revelations of his human, all-too-human reality. His was a life of facades and dead emotions, false faces, and his struggles to become who he really was. He tells us he wasn’t his film roles, not Hud or Brick or Fast Eddie or Cool Hand Luke, but he wasn’t really the guy playing them either. He was a double enigma, an actor playing an actor. He says:

I’ve always had a sense of being an observer of my own life. . . . I have a sense of watching something, but not of living something. It’s like looking at a photograph that’s out of focus . . . . It’s spacey; I guess I always feel spaced out.

His courageous honesty reminds me of Friedrich Nietzsche’s final work, Ecce Home (Behold the Man), not because Paul waxes philosophical but because he’s brutally honest. If a movie star’s truths strike you as not comparable to those of a great philosopher, I would suggest considering that Nietzsche’s key concern was the theater and how we are all actors, a few genuine and most false. In The Twilight of the Idols he asked, “Are you genuine? Or merely an actor? A representative? Or that which is represented? In the end, perhaps you are merely a copy of an actor.””

The Cell Phone Is a Pair of Red High Heels

i forget
i forget
  i forget
April 22, 2023 7:19 pm

I’ll defer to your experience with chatGPT & acid.

But you needn’t defer to my experience with people who are “ADD.” (Or have a convenient claim ticket saying that they are.) Or the experiential surround of all the short time preference folk, who seem to be getting shorter all the time.

The kids who could not postpone gratification, even for a 100% ROI, have always been. And there’s a ton of those marshmallows relocated to CO. Maybe that’s the “energy” you felt.

i forget
i forget
  i forget
April 22, 2023 8:31 pm

Eating, even partially, whether immediately, or just a few seconds before “the nice lady” comes back to see whose got intestinal fortitude & whose got intestinal marshmallow is the point. Your race realism has got you blinded by the white.

I was in D. Then to the west of D, in the foothills, which was better, but still too close to D-influx. Currently I am to the north. Have been in this state for some years now. And, like Abigail has said she did – & did – I have had eyes on getting the f out of here. “White” ain’t nearly enough of a delimiter. Not in the so-called beginning, which was merely continuation, & not now. That’s the Big Indian in the room – & for some he’s The Invisible Manimal.

“Changes” in search of positivity means trials & tribulations. She’s smart. Smart enough to read me & explain it to you. ☻ And she reads strong in print. I think she’s got it & will find it.

No, I did not. As I explained, twice before, I was without internet for some time. And email is still unsorted. How do you happen to have an addy for me?

i forget
i forget
  i forget
April 22, 2023 9:52 pm

Lotta hate in Loveland. Of the gross incompetence kind. Personal experience.

And that was before I began my move thru.

Which, since this isn’t the place, will remain in process until completion. If there is such a place as completion. I do think there is such an interim, little-c, place.

Where I am, any more precisely than indicated, is, I bourne, not just an admin rolodex-request away.

i forget
i forget
  i forget
April 23, 2023 3:59 pm

Michael Mann can do no, or very little, wrong. So long as one sets aside grassy knoll plot holes (– for later enjoyment).

Like the kill shot the entirety of Heat is built upon: Waingro would have never been in the McCauley crew. Waingro was the glyphosate put in the Miracle-Gro by the mad scientist that killed all but one of the weeds most were rooting for.

Same vein, picking up the black short-order cook on the pinch-hit fly, to drive the getaway car. Because the criminals knew each other “on the yard” & everybody knows that there ain’t no racial harmonizing like prison a cappella. No way. Almost might as well call an Uber. But it too helped with the unter’ing.

So … Neil McCauley & Vincent Hanna sitting in coffee tree(shop), k-i-s-s-i-n-g? Those cups got no bottoms in ‘em. Fun to watch, but what a mess. Sure, lesser of two messes is an angle: a coffeebath, or a gunfight bloodbath on the side of the 105? (trump or desantis?). Real life? Neither.

((“Mann studied English literature at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.[7] While a student, he saw Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove and fell in love with movies. In an L.A. Weekly interview, he described the film’s impact on him:

It said to my whole generation of filmmakers that you could make an individual statement of high integrity and have that film be successfully seen by a mass audience all at the same time. In other words, you didn’t have to be making Seven Brides for Seven Brothers if you wanted to work in the mainstream film industry, or be reduced to niche filmmaking if you wanted to be serious about cinema. So that’s what Kubrick meant, aside from the fact that Strangelove was a revelation.[8]”

High integrity & Stanley Kubrick & really high moon landings & Heat being used as a training film by the Marines – oh, my.))

Scenes from a movie to illustrate this ain’t a movie and/but that many people live movie lives. “All the world’s a stage.” Nietzsche’s scrutiny of actors. Hollywood capitalizes, then pays the profits-promotions forward. The loop feeds forward & back ∞ into parts of a noose.

So …Why?

To see if cross-table proximity ripens into some sort of compatibility? I can’t imagine it. And if the I I’ve got ~ that’s got me ~ can’t compass it, well, it doesn’t, & can’t, exist.

Or maybe just to add thrown food to the words? ☺

I’m going to “guess” Animal House Bluto wasn’t of German lineage. But I am. Just without the “good little” prefix.

Which missing part is the part that actually matters. The only “part” that ever matters, actually: What’s not there: The void & the abyss that births all the dancing stars too many of whom have only enough imagination-fuel to join the chorus line & then, exhausted, spurn the absence responsible for presence.

That’s a steam irony for ya. Hell, that’s a mangler. Here’s a good little german model:

https://www.mieleusa.com/e/rotary-ironer-b-990-7222730-p

Like that Aryan chorus line stuff that you say CO exemplifies. If that isn’t an “I ain’t in KS anymore” hallucination, nuthin is. You’re making your own acid.

That’s some of my stuff.

Your stuff?

Living fossilized as deep sea coelacanths, or clay pigeon Urvogel bones offering their pitched thru the air flanks, or un-killable zombie hordes a-shambling.

It’s more of the same.

Plot holes in the road to nowhere, lined by those towns I’ve been to, those restaurants I’ve eaten in, those line dances I’ve … well, I eschewed those.

NatSoc. Hitler. Jews. Particular “strongman” good, “others” bad. Tired stuff that never retires. It can’t. It’s hardwired.

Separatism. Yes. All the way. Thomas Wolfe meets Randy Weaver. Every wo/man is an island, possibly somewhere in Idaho.

But that’s “too” introverted & anti”social” for you. It takes an Amish Village of Hatfields & McCoys.

I’ve been & done. In life &, corroborated, in the books. It didn’t kill me. Maybe it Nietzsche’d me up a bit (the part attributed to him that Flash wouldn’t attribute to him). But unlike the Hatfield that lit out for Oregon, but then backtracked/slid – I left out & I never went back. Or forgot.

Nothing personal. But nothing personal is possible. Business either, since despite gangster & lawyer word-magic distinctions, it’s all personal.

I’d have sent this via email, since mine’s outed already, but it’s still really out.

And your suggestion to meet timestamp is earlier than my Loveland-is-wasteland comment – but yours wasn’t there, my screen, when mine went in. Something to do with elevation & DIA(bolical) are some theories. But then the darpanet bar & grill/coffeeshop is nuthin’ if not diabolical.

mark
mark
April 21, 2023 9:58 pm

Thanks for putting this out Admin/Steve.

KaD
KaD
April 21, 2023 10:12 pm

I’ve been wondering about this for a while now.
Had a small poodle vaccinated when I was a kid, dog was really screwed up after that.

Bullwinkle
Bullwinkle
April 21, 2023 11:24 pm

I read recently that Rabies is only 15% fatal.
Most bat species are immune to rabies.
The Rabies virus is relatively large.
Its size makes it ideal to extract and insert other DNA/RNA components.
When your pet is vaccinated for Rabies, the virus in the vaccine will be found in your pets saliva.
Get a loving lick from your pet, the vaccine Rabies gets into you.
All pet Rabies reported were from lab engineered Rabies.
Wild rabies is almost non existent.
Rabies was/is so rare that there was little or no reason for Pasteur to even look into making the so called remedy.
….Unless there were other Nefarious reasons involved.
The last Man to die of Rabies was in the mid ’50s.
The recent death reported was AFTER receiving the Anti- Rabies procedure.
It is most likely that the “Cure” killed the Man.

WilliamtheResolute
WilliamtheResolute
April 21, 2023 11:42 pm

Thanks, I’m now done vaxxing my six year old Frenchie…apparently good for life. I made the decision last month to quit my “corporate” vet for any service other than a rabies shot…

Anonymous
Anonymous
April 22, 2023 1:12 am

Beloved family dog almost died from autoimmune disease that came out of nowhere. Went thru 2 corporate vets and everybdollar I had before I got out of the city and had radiology and labs done for a third what they wanted to charge (which I didn’t have & my dog was going to die). Ruled out liver cancer, thank god, and staged down to low maintenance dose of steroid. Dog can’t run & jump much anymore but still with us at about 6 years old. Honest country vet said 1. dogs are dying from autoimmune diseases at amazing rates and she doesn’t know why (food? environment? water? chemtrails?) and 2. Don’t vaccinate your dog or it will kill him. There’s no med exception in TX so we keep to ourselves more. I worry ablut walking him w/o parvo protection.

Horst
Horst
April 22, 2023 7:35 am

Look into tetanus, quite similar story.

Chuck
Chuck
April 22, 2023 8:49 am

We only do the rabies shot and refuse any others suggested. Only reason we get the rabies shot is one of our dogs loves him some skunk and we have lots of them here. I think he likes getting sprayed.

Guest
Guest
April 22, 2023 9:54 am

Don’t people wonder why so many pets have so many health problems these days?
Besides rotten dog food of course.

To me it was a short ride from finding out all of vaxxx info to no more vaxxxes for pets- except rabies because I have to.

Does anyone have that link to the article that was saying they are now actually vaxxxing wildlife? I’m sure I got it from here somehow.
The reason I ask is bird flu propaganda is quietly going on. In my neighborhood Facebook page they just showed a dead mountain lion supposedly from it- plus 3 bears earlier. Beware- BIRDS!
I’ve found one sort of like but most are ‘they are thinking about it’.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
April 22, 2023 1:09 pm

I lost my Great Dane, Moose two weeks ago a month after a rabies vax. Granted, he was 8.5 years old but this sure makes me wonder. We have a big love seat in our bedroom which was his bed. He curled up one night and just didn’t wake up. I hugged him in the morning and he was cold. Breaks my heart…

Love that dog and can’t recommend Danes highly enough.

Euddolen ap Afallach
Euddolen ap Afallach
April 22, 2023 2:23 pm

The Wicked Vax of The West: “I’ll get you my pretty, and your little dog too! “

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
April 22, 2023 3:54 pm

Had my 2 cats and my 2 dogs vaxxed when they were kittens and puppies. Almost lost one of the cats. He laid around for 3 days. Thought he was going to die but the 4th day he was better. Never getting any of them injected again. The cats are now 4 yrs old and the dogs are 3 years old.

chezron
chezron
February 12, 2024 2:41 pm

All vaccines harm and shorten the life of the dog unnecessarily.