Smallpox Inoculation Used to Mean Intentional Exposure to Virus. Now They’re Denying Natural Immunity Is a Thing

How do you get from praising early inoculation to demanding nobody ever gets exposed to a wild germ again?

Editor’s note: What follows is a piece of pro-injection propaganda by The Washington Post that tells how Benjamin Franklin balked from inoculating (variolating) his son against smallpox and later regreted it when the child died of the disease. (Ie it’s a cheap morality tale where Franklin was “vaccine hesistant” and lived to regret it.) What the article fails to tackle however is that inoculation against smallpox in Franklin’s time did not mean injecting someone with a vaccine (certainly not an mRNA one), but instead intentional exposure to the actual virus:

In China, powdered smallpox scabs were blown up the noses of the healthy. The patients would then develop a mild case of the disease and from then on were immune to it. The technique did have a 0.5–2.0% mortality rate, but that was considerably less than the 20–30% mortality rate of the disease itself.

In other words, the story of early smallpox inoculation works just as well, if not better, as propaganda for the healthy to not fear mild viruses (COVID is infinitely more survivable for the healthy than smallpox variolation) and to acquire their immunity early and by exposure. It certainly makes for a devastating case against any lockdowns and “non-medical public health interventions”. If these actually worked to cut the spread of germs, especially in our early years when we are at our most vital and our immune systems are most adaptive, we would be doomed indeed.


Five weeks had passed since the death of Benjamin Franklin’s son, and rumors were swirling. Four-year-old Francis “Franky” Franklin had died after being inoculated for smallpox, the rumor went, and now his pro-inoculation father was trying to hide it.

The gossip reached such a point that on Dec. 30, 1736, the grieving father, then 30, confronted it in the pages of his newspaper, the Pennsylvania Gazette.

“Inasmuch as some People are, by that [rumor] … deter’d from having that Operation perform’d on their Children,” he wrote, “I do hereby sincerely declare, that he was not inoculated, but receiv’d the Distemper in the common Way of Infection.”

It must have been hard to admit — Franklin had long advocated inoculation as a “safe and beneficial practice” — that his own son had gone unprotected.

“I intended to have my Child inoculated,” he explained, “as soon as he should have recovered sufficient Strength from a Flux [diarrhea] with which he had been long afflicted.”

More than five decades later, in his autobiography published posthumously, he said he had “long regretted bitterly, and still regret” that he had chosen to wait.

Nearly three centuries later, Franklin’s story has new resonance as a fourth wave of the coronavirus pandemic grips the country, driven by the highly contagious delta variant and disproportionately affecting unvaccinated Americans, including children younger than 12, who are not yet eligible to be immunized [the scoundrel is literally using the tale of how natural immunity and early exposure to viruses saved lives in the 1700s to push for injection eligibility, read injection recommendation, read injection passports, read injection mandates by stealth], and teenagers, who have among the lowest vaccination rates in the country.

The concept of immunization came to the American colonies via Africa. In the early 1700s, Puritan minister Cotton Mather learned from Onesimus, a man he enslaved, about the method long used in West Africa, where a weakened form of the disease would be intentionally applied to a cut.

This gave the patient a mild case of smallpox, with a drastically higher survival rate than the usual illness. And afterward, the patient would be forever immune. Mather brought this concept to a local doctor, who began testing it on family members and people he enslaved.

Growing up in Boston and apprenticing for his older brother’s printing business, the teenage Benjamin Franklin had a front-row seat to the public debate over the doctor’s experiment. But, as Stephen Coss explains in his book, “The Fever of 1721: The Epidemic That Revolutionized Medicine and American Politics,” there was a catch: His brother was against it. In fact, a desire to publish anti-inoculation screeds was a major reason why his brother started his newspaper, according to Coss. [Doubtless in 2020 his brother would have been a lockdowner calling for total germ-avoidance at all costs.]

The younger Franklin, always a lover of science and invention, probably didn’t appreciate having to play a part in publishing anti-inoculation views. So later, when he had his own newspaper in Philadelphia, he became one of America’s “foremost inoculation evangelists,” Coss wrote.

When another smallpox outbreak hit Boston in 1730, he carefully recounted how well those who had chosen inoculation fared — only four died out of “hundreds” inoculated, he wrote — versus those who caught it naturally, in which case the death rate was nearly 30 percent.

He later published detailed instructions on how to perform an inoculation, and his decades of cataloguing survival rates probably played a role in George Washington’s decision during the Revolutionary War to order the entire Continental Army to be inoculated. [That is inoculated before any injection vaccine had ever been invented.] Washington had natural immunity after surviving a bout of smallpox in his youth.

So why, only six years later, did Franklin’s son go uninoculated as another outbreak raged through Philadelphia? Many historians have accepted “at face value” Franklin’s explanation that he was waiting for his son’s health to improve, Coss wrote in Smithsonian Magazine. However, he proposes a different explanation, that Franklin’s wife was afraid of inoculation and convinced her husband not to subject their son to it. He notes that the couple’s relationship, once love-filled and affectionate, degenerated after Franky’s death. Franklin began characterizing his wife as irresponsible and questioned her fitness as a mother.

In 1759, Franklin wrote about such a scenario, while exploring the public’s reticence to accept inoculation. When “one parent or near relation is against it the other does not chuse to inoculate a child without free consent of all parties, lest in case of a disastrous event, perpetual blame should follow.”

He also began to spend significant amounts of time away from her, like spending more than a decade in England when he originally said he would be gone a few months. He often took his daughter, grandson and other family members with him on these trips, but never her. In the last 17 years of her life, they spent only two years together, Coss wrote.

Near the end of his life, as he was writing his autobiography, the blame theme continued. After saying he “long regretted bitterly” the circumstances of his son’s death, he added this warning:

“This I mention for the Sake of Parents, who omit that Operation on the Supposition that they should never forgive themselves if a Child died under it; my Example showing that the Regret may be the same either way, and that therefore the safer should be chosen.”

Source: The Washington Post

6 Comments
  1. Raptar Driver says

    First do no harm!
    If you are killing people to save them then you are doing harm.
    Keep it simple stupid.

    1. paschn says

      The Central Bank Clan had their “tools” create these protocols. So why do they have them ignore it all now?

      http://www.cirp.org/library/ethics/nuremberg/

      1. Raptar Driver says

        Yes, excellent!

  2. ken says

    The Delta variant doesn’t exist as the PCR cannot distinguish between any viruses. Since the original Sars 2 has not been isolated and proven to exist than any variant cannot exist either. Just common sense…

    A disease with a 30+ pct death is a heck of a lot different than this covid bs with a death rate of 0.13pct. With that rate even I would give serious consideration to taking the shot assuming it has been properly tested and approved… not like this covid nonsense where the Fauci Death Agency (FDA) just rubber stamps something untested and only out for 8 months. No near term or long term data. They can’t even tell you how many doses to take. They won’t even tell you what’s in it! That my friends is criminal. But criminal seems to be the go to method these days.

    This West can no longer look back at the medical nazis in Hitlers Germany as the largest medical crime against humanity. The West now fits that bill.

    What Ben didn’t (or maybe did) think is that trying to inoculate a sick person is not a good idea especially as in today’s injection form. Immediately after a vaccination the immune system is knocked down. People are more susceptible to catching anything. If his son was already very ill the inoculation might have killed him as well.

    Doctors (back when there were real doctors) used to suggest getting inoculated a month or so before the flu season to give the body a chance to recuperate from the injection and build an immunity. Today they’ll give you a jab if your in a Hospice Center and won’t survive till next week much less the next flu season. More Fed$bux.

  3. GMC says

    Old Benjamin wasn’t so smart afterall – exposing your 4 years old son to any lethal situation was pretty stupid.Would have been better to give his son to the Mohicans to raise.

  4. malatok says

    According to EUDRA vigilance…the official EU covaids death stats site…almost 22000 dead already from the covaids death prick…2 million injured of which 1 million are in serious if not critical condition. Who said their covaids death shot isn’t working? And this is just the tip of the iceberg because most deaths are ignored!

    https://alethonews.com/2021/08/23/21766-dead-over-2-million-injured-50-serious-eus-database-of-adverse-reactions-for-covid-19-shots/

    YOU are the disease, their death shot the cure.

    The covaids death prick caper in under 2 minutes.
    https://www.brighteon.com/698bda64-e06b-4a2a-9b4a-89d916a50e9c

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