Secret CDC Report Revealed Polio Paralysis Cases Beyond Cutter Lab Incident
"The government said, 'Oh, okay. This only happened from one lab in California is called the cutter lab.' They said, 'Okay, it was just one batch. It's otherwise totally fine.' Well, that's not exactly true. Turns out that the CDC did have a secret report authored by Dr. Alexander Langmure who discovered several cases of paralysis with the sulkq vaccine, not just from the cutter lab. And the report was never released to the public."
About this episode
In this Redacted monologue, the host challenges the conventional narrative that polio was eradicated primarily through vaccination, presenting evidence of government suppression of safety data and unresolved questions about the disease's actual causes. The presentation reveals that polio cases peaked in 1952 and were already declining three years before the Salk vaccine rollout in 1955, coinciding with changes in diagnostic criteria that made polio harder to diagnose. The host presents previously suppressed evidence including a secret CDC report by Dr. Alexander Langmure showing vaccine-associated paralysis cases beyond the publicized Cutter Lab incident, and NIH researcher Bernice Eddie's 1960 discovery that vaccine substrate caused cancerous tumors in hamsters, for which she faced retaliation after defying orders to suppress publication. The monologue explores alternative theories including pesticide exposure, particularly DDT used during harvest seasons when polio outbreaks typically occurred, noting that American and British soldiers stationed abroad contracted polio while local populations did not, challenging contagion theory. The host points out that researchers failed to infect laboratory monkeys orally despite this being the supposed transmission route in humans, only succeeding when injecting ground spinal tissue directly into monkey brains. The presentation notes that acute flaccid paralysis cases continue rising globally even as diagnosed polio declines, and that the Salk vaccine does not prevent transmission or provide herd immunity, only potentially preventing paralysis in vaccinated individuals. The monologue argues these unresolved questions and suppressed data should be disclosed for proper informed consent, criticizing media and institutions for promoting a simplified success narrative while abandoning serious scientific inquiry into lingering anomalies.
Key takeaways
- NIH researcher Bernice Eddie was demoted and lost her lab after defying orders to suppress her 1960 discovery that polio vaccine substrate caused cancer in hamsters, with tens of millions already exposed to SV40 virus.
- A secret CDC report by Dr. Alexander Langmure revealed vaccine-associated paralysis cases beyond the Cutter Lab incident, contradicting government claims that problems were isolated to one California manufacturer.
- Polio cases peaked in 1952 and declined for three years before the 1955 Salk vaccine rollout, with diagnostic criteria changes in 1955 potentially accounting for decreased diagnoses independent of vaccination.
- American and British soldiers stationed abroad contracted polio while local populations in the same areas did not, challenging the theory that polio spreads through person-to-person contagion.
- Researchers could not infect laboratory monkeys with polio orally despite this being the supposed human transmission route, only succeeding by injecting ground spinal tissue directly into monkey brains.
- Cases of acute flaccid paralysis continue rising globally even as diagnosed polio declines, raising questions about whether the underlying condition was addressed or merely reclassified.
- The Salk polio vaccine does not prevent viral transmission or provide herd immunity, only potentially preventing paralysis in vaccinated individuals, making neighbor vaccination status medically irrelevant.