Here Is the Current List of Diseases for Which the CDC Recommends Vaccination
This information from the CDC will probably disappear within days
The biggest plague facing America right now is the plague perpetrated by the hate cult that has spread to many of our younger men, one of whom just shot up a Catholic school.
There is no vaccination for that, I’m afraid.
However, the CDC, for a few more minutes at least, recommends several vaccines to control or prevent several diseases and/or viruses.
The information on this page is lifted directly from the CDC website here:
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/by-disease/index.html
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You’re gonna need it.
The CDC version is likely to disappear as soon as RFK Jr. discovers that it is there.
The following is in the CDC’s words, not mine:
Recommended vaccines by disease
Vaccines are available for these potentially dangerous or deadly diseases. Over the years, these vaccines have prevented countless cases of disease and saved lives. Research shows that routine vaccinations for children born during 1994–2023 will have prevented about 508 million illnesses and 32 million hospitalizations and saved over 1.1 million lives. Infants, children, adolescents, teens, and adults need different vaccinations, depending on their age, location, job, lifestyle, travel schedule, health conditions, or previous vaccinations.
Click on a disease name to learn more about the diseases and the vaccines that prevent them.
Vaccines recommended for travel and some specific groups
People in certain research jobs and travel situations might be exposed to dangerous or deadly diseases that are no longer common in the U.S. Because of the increased risk of disease exposure in these instances, nine non-routine vaccines are available, listed below by disease. These are considered non-routine vaccines because they are not part of CDC's routinely recommended immunization schedules for children, adolescents and adults.
Thanks for reading!
Stay safe. Stay immunized.





Why small pox on this list? Even the CDC acknowledges that small pox was eradicated circa 1980 in the wild. Only the Russians and Americans allegedly still have samples.