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July 3, 2025 • 14 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:14):
Seven o six here at fifty five kr C DE
Talk station. A very happy independence Dae to you. Please
to see it worked out for us. I'm happy to
introduce to the fifty five KRC Morning Show to talk
about her book The Ultimate Vaccine Timeline, a fact packed
history of vaccines and their makers. Welcome to the fifty
five CARSY Morning Show. Shas Khan a London born Swiss creator, designer,

(00:37):
information junking, critical thinker, obsessed for some reason. We'll find
out why with vaccines. Graduated from a Central Saint Martin
College of Art and Design with a BA and Product
Design complemented or education with certification certifications and courses of nutrition, marketing, communications, anatomy,
physiology and immunal biology as well as vaccinology. Shaskhan, it
is a pleasure to have you on the fifty five

(00:58):
KRC Morning Show.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Hi, Brian, thanks so much for having me.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
All Right, with your interesting background, I mean, you didn't
go to medical school and you didn't become a scientist,
research siteist, how is it you parlayed your background into
this profound interest in vaccines, which led, of course to
your publication of the book The Ultimate Vaccine Timeline.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
I've always had a passion for science, and I almost
did biology as a major at university and then went
to art. But the reason why I decided to look
into this is because simply I had a personal tragedy
in my life. My father passed away two months after
a flu shot, and there were just lots of rag
flags that went up for me because he was diagnosed
with stage four lung cancer. He never smoked, it was

(01:43):
pretty healthy, but in hospital all his symptoms were neurological.
So I just was a bit confused, and I didn't
know anything about vaccines. I mean, I'm not a parent either.
Some vaccines went on my radar, but after that incident,
basically I started asking questions, went and read the package
and start was surprised to find that the neurological injuries
were actually acknowledged and recognized after flu vaccines, And that

(02:04):
just got me started reading and then going down the
rabbit hole in libraries and national archives in the UK
and in Switzerland.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
Wow, it's tragedies like that somehow often end up bearing
fruit in the form of providing the rest of us
with information that's actually being hidden. We learned a lot
about this, you know, the behind the scenes research and
the studies and the outcomes that the pharmaceutical companies knew about.
Most notably, I'm thinking obviously about the COVID nineteen vaccine,

(02:30):
but they didn't disclose it to the American people, and
they got this emergency use authorization which prevents them from
being sued for this what I would argue was a
holy whole cloth experimental vaccine. And then we find out,
like you, when you go to find out what the
story is and what the realities are and is there
any causal connection between my daughter or my son having
a heart attack at age twelve with these vaccines, they

(02:52):
don't want to give you the information. So did you
run in any brick walls trying to discover information on
these vaccines.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
On COVID specifically, yes, like I think everybody else. And
I think it's also because there's relatively recent so we're
still going to have to be patient and wait for
a while before all the information comes out. But a
lot of information is already available. But for the other
vaccines and then the archives. The only roadblock I came
against is there are lots of documents that are still
protected by by the Freedom of Information Acts. I mean, sorry,

(03:22):
you can't get access to them for the Freedom of
Information Acts because they're still protected. So some of the
requests that I made through the National Archives, some I
got through to and others I couldn't get access to.
And I'll try again, I guess, in five years, to
get access to these documents. So these are documents from
the government, like internal minutes from the meetings, different reports
that they might have received. And I could get access

(03:44):
to documents from the eighties, but documents that are more recent.
And I say recent was like, you know, question comments,
comments from the nineties that I still couldn't get a
hold of. So that's the only roadblock that I came
across at the moment, because otherwise a lot of information
out there is just a question of really digging in
and having to go find it, and most people don't
want to do that in libraries.

Speaker 1 (04:06):
Well, and your book is a historical one too, because
I mean, as I read it spans over fifteen hundred years.
Have vaccines been around that long?

Speaker 2 (04:14):
Well, vaccines in the way that we understand them haven't
been around that long. But the concept of variolation, which
is the concept of giving someone a controlled like back
in the days it was smallpox, so that was like
they would either blow dried scabs up your nose or
try to scrape it into an open wound, superficial wound
on your arm. That's been around for almost like one
thy three hundred years. We don't have any, you know,

(04:37):
definitive records where it started, but it's believed to have
started in Asia and then come over to Europe and
then buy the seventeen hundreds, late seventeen hundreds was in Europe,
and it was banned eventually in the mid eighteen hundreds
because it was known to be a pretty dangerous procedure.
It could transmit all kinds of other infections and people
could get like a crossed arms and that was replaced

(04:58):
with vaccination, which is the concept that basically Edward Jenner
in the UK brought up, which is using cowtbooks to
that rarely against to vaccinate against the small points.

Speaker 1 (05:08):
Now, did you reach any determination as to whether there
were particular categories of vaccines that were quote unquote safe
versus those that you personally wouldn't use because you fear
how they are manufacturing, I think, and you're not talking
to a doctor or a virologist or a scientist, and
I don't play one on radio, but mRNA technology sounds
to me from what I've read. They've known about this

(05:30):
type of technology behind the scenes, but they've never launched
any major pharmaceutical drugs based on that technology because there
was a lot of risk associated with it. And then
along comes COVID and that's the technology they use for
the COVID vaccines. Is there something inherently concerning about that
type of technology mr NA?

Speaker 2 (05:48):
Well, what's concerning about that type of technology is something
completely new and was initially used in the concept of
cancer treatment. So obviously you had various thick patients who
didn't have much other recourse than almar was real option
because it didn't have any other options. The first mRNA
critical trial for the infractious disease wasn't until twenty thirteen,
and it was done by Kurevak in Germany, and it

(06:10):
wasn't even very successful, like they sold the results in
one hundred people and it wasn't very wasn't very promising.
So the fact that they're using this topology which turns
people cells into a protein spike creating factory, is incredibly
concerning because We don't know how long the protein is
going to be expressed, We don't know how many you know,
spike proteins you're creating. That could be explaining as well

(06:32):
why we see such a huge different types of problems
like from myocarditis to blood cloths, to respiraty issues, to
weird skins issues and neurological diseases. So for me, it's
definitely a technology that is incredibly concerning. To have launched
it like this on a mass scale under an emergency
youth authorization is incredibly concerning.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
Well some would say criminal, and there in lines of
challenge because you know, we had this, oh my god,
we're all going to die global pandemic on our hands,
and so people were inclined to, pretty much like a
cancer patient with no resources or no other options, go
with whatever option is available. It almost seems like we
were all in that circumstance. But if Pfizer or the
pharmaceutical manufacturers of these mrn NA technologies knew themselves that

(07:16):
there were risks and substantial risks compared to other f
like FDA approved drugs, what's with the rush to judgment
and getting it out into the world. Is there something
nefarious behind that, or is just the old fashioned profit motive.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Well, obviously profit motive is one of them, because Pfizer
made a huge amount of money with their vaccine, But
I don't understand why the government would back that up
because the profit motive doesn't really apply.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
For them exactly.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
So unfortunately, I would speculate that there's something either they
wanted to see how we would comply. It was a
social experiment, or there is something in that vaccine that
will discover down the line at some point that was
again tested to see how it could react in people.
And so that's that's my speculation because I have no
way of confirming.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
So one big, massive stage one clinical trial on the
global population basically.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Pretty much i'd say stage two, stage three. Maybe Stage
one is usually only one hundred people. But yeah, definitely
an experiment in a mass scale all right.

Speaker 1 (08:19):
Now, in so far as other vaccines are concerned, moving
away from the m RNA COVID vaccine, I am not
a complete anti vaxxer. I know there are folks out
there that are saying hell not of vaccines that you know,
autism is a big concern, but I'm happy that we
don't have rooms full of hundreds of iron lungs, which
is what people need when they got polio, and the
polio vaccines seems to have been wildly successful like a

(08:41):
lot of other vaccines. Is have you reach any conclusions
about some of these long standing drugs or vaccines that
we are usually regularly.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
Getting well For me, polio was definitely one of the
biggest shuckers because if anybody Hasten has read Dissolving Illusions
by doctor Susan Humphrie and Roman Dystrionic, that goes into
explaining very well the misconceptions that we had around the
polio vaccine being so effective. And I'll tell you two
things is they changed the definition of polio when the

(09:11):
vaccine came out, and they also changed this funny because
you see often the same playbook, like they defined people
who were vaccinated as unvaccinated because they hadn't they received
polio or they had polio sorry within two weeks of
getting the vaccine, so they were able to pull them unalcylated,
which everyone knows is what actions happened exactly with COVID

(09:31):
vaccine and polio as well. Nobody looked into really understanding
what the causes were. There were lots of people at
the time who were sticking the alarm about DDT so
pesticides that were being used and the reason why it
was more prominent in summertime. And the polio vaccine itself
was also very problematic. I mean, it caused polio. That's
why very quickly in the nineteen sixties who shifted to

(09:53):
the oral polio, which was the sugar cube live version. Yeah,
but even that also caused problems. So I was my
bubble basically burst when I looked into polio because I
came out of this, you know, when I approached this
research very four vaccines, believing what we were told, and
the polio vaccine basically burst that bubble, and I had
to realize that, Hang on a minute, they've been telling

(10:13):
us the bunch of propaganda, in my opinion.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
So hmm, well, I would just think about the global
numbers of people with polio compared to where they were,
say at the turn of the century, last century. Obviously
there's a reduction in the number of polio cases out there.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
I don't want to support, go ahead, Yeah, So I
was just going to say, what's interesting about polio as
an infectious disease? Like all the other infectious diseases were
pretty high in the beginning of the twentieth century, like
you know, measles and eustice and dipteria. But polio came
out of nowhere. It was very interesting, like there was
zero zerra cases and then suddenly nineteen sixteen there was
an epidemic in New York City and then there were

(10:50):
some spikes. But essentially polio pretty much came out of nowhere.
So it looks like it was more of an environmental
thing that was causing these problems. And there's also something
called provocation poliomi lightest, which was known to be caused
after DTP vaccine and smallpox vaccine, they knew that givting
vaccines the kids could actually create polio. And that's in
the documentation and that I show in my book.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
Oh that's frightening, and is this and this is information.
It's all well documented, I mean obviously not readily available
to you or I. And you walk into your you
take your kid into a pediatrician's office, it's just a
matter of course, Well, it's time to get the polios,
you know, sugar, It's time to get the the measles
and mumps. Vaccine, and no one really stops and discusses

(11:31):
the potential downside risk of this. I don't recall that
ever happening with my children.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
No, no, they don't. But the information is readily available,
but as I said, often it's available only through libraries
or through paywalls of medical articles that most people don't
have access to. So I have tried to put as
much information in the book and also the website. They
will a company. It will show give links to people
so that if they want to go and find out more,
they'll have, you know, places to go and look. But no,

(11:57):
this information isn't like it's not on the vaccine information
sheet given by the CDC.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
That's for sure. Frightening stuff. Well, I'm glad we have
you out there. Schez Khan, author of the Ultimate Vaccine
Timeline of Fact back History of Vaccines in the Makers four.
We part company this morning, and I've enjoyed our conversation
very enlightening. Is there some one thing that specifically jumps
out at you? If you had to let my listening
audience know of some terrible or crazy fact you learn
when compiling all this information, is something immediately jumped to mine?

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Well, apart from the polio issues. For me, I wasn't
aware of the vaccine Injury Compensation program when I started
my research. Those who don't know, since nineteen eighty nine,
over eleven thousand cases of vaccine harm have been compensated
for over five billion US dollars and it concerns mainly
mainly the flu vaccine, with the DTP being a close

(12:47):
second or third position. But this I wasn't aware of
because obviously my dad passed away after the flu vaccines,
and I was quite shocked to see that that was
already seen as one of the most compensated cases in
the vaccine injury Compensation program.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
Well, condolence is on your law your father, and I'm
glad you did the research to track it down and
I appreciate you putting it all together in the Ultimate
Vaccine Timeline. My listeners can easily get a copy of
your book on my blog page at fifty five car
Sea dot com and I'll encourage them to do so.
It's been great talking with you, and thank you again
for your time.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
Thank you, Brian, Thank you so much for having me by.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
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Speaker 2 (14:46):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

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