They wouldn't die because they would continue taking all the safe and effective vaccines.
 Oh, that's right - they're not safe and effective. Some aren't vaccines at all.
T.B. Yoits wrote: “They wouldn’t die because they would continue taking all the safe and effective vaccines. Oh, that’s right - they’re not safe and effective. Some aren’t vaccines at all.”
You must have something against saving the lives of children.
Name the childhood vaccines you consider to be safe and effective. Meanwhile, childhood vaccines have saved millions.
AI Overview
Vaccines have saved an estimated 154 million lives globally since 1974, the vast majority of whom were children under five years old. Globally, routine childhood vaccination prevents between 3.5 and 5 million deaths every year.
Key statistics on the impact of vaccines:
Total lives saved (since 1974): An estimated 154 million lives have been saved, equivalent to about six lives every minute.
Children under five: 95% (about 146 million) of those whose lives were saved were children younger than 5 years old, with 101 million being infants younger than 1 year.
Annual impact: Childhood vaccination prevents approximately 4 million deaths worldwide each year.
Impact on infant mortality: Immunization has accounted for 40% of the observed decline in global infant mortality rates over the past 50 years.
Most impactful vaccine: The measles vaccine has had the single most significant impact on reducing infant mortality, accounting for nearly 94 million of the total lives saved.
Disease eradication efforts: Vaccines led to the global eradication of smallpox in 1980 and have brought polio to the brink of eradication, with cases down by 99% since 1988.
These figures highlight routine immunization as one of the most successful and cost-effective public health interventions in history, significantly improving child survival rates worldwide.