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Excerpts from Diabolical Errors: The Strange and Unsettling History of Vaccine Science

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The long-awaited follow-up from the author of the best-selling What the Nurses SawThe Strange and Unsettling History of Vaccine ScienceBy Ken McCarthy
#1 Best Seller in Medical History on Amazon (11/5/25)
#1 New Release in Epidemiology on Amazon (11/5/25)
#1 New Release in Immunology on Amazon (11/5/25)
#1 New Release in Public Health on Amazon (11/5/25)
#1 New Release in Vaccinations on Amazon (11/5/25)
This book contains chapter-length excerpts from the upcoming book, Diabolical Errors.
In America, there is a shortage of doctors and nurses. Wait times to see doctors are growing ever longer, while patient time with physicians is growing ever shorter. Young people have never had so many metabolic diseases or been prescribed so many drugs. Maternal and infant survival rates are the lowest in the developed world by a far measure, and getting worse, not better. Meanwhile, government and medical authorities are mandating more and more vaccines.

"How did we get here?" and "What is the way out?" are answerable questions. This book provides both.

We have all assumed that somewhere amongst the impenetrable Great Pyramid-sized pile of papers, studies, and journal articles produced by vaccine scientists over the last century plus, there must be a scientifically clear and compelling justification for the mass compulsory vaccination programs of the U.S. and elsewhere. This book suggests that, bullying and badgering from officials aside, there is no such thing, and the power of those who assert that there is comes not from the legitimate authority of genuine expertise, but from brazen, heartless, and fraud-drenched authoritarianism.

The emperor has no clothes.

76 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 4, 2025

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About the author

Ken McCarthy

42 books17 followers
Time Magazine (March, 2014) credited Ken McCarthy with being the person who had the fundamental insight that made it possible to transform the Internet from a non-commercial technical platform to the world's biggest marketplace and publishing platform.

His insight? That clicks had a commercial value and that their value was variable depending on audience. This insight is literally the foundation that made online businesses like Google and Facebook and millions of others possible.

In addition to this contribution, Ken was also:

1) the first to publish an article about email as a marketing tool in a marketing industry publication (1994)

2) one of the primary pioneers of the banner ad (1994)

3) early pioneer of auto-responder marketing (1996)

4) early pioneer of pay-per-click marketing (2001)

5) introduced "push button" audio to the Internet (2002), the foundation of the podcasting industry

6) early pioneer of practical online video marketing (2005), though he published the first article on the subject in 1994, and

7) early pioneer of mobile marketing (2008)

When Brian Kurtz picked the top living marketing people on the planet to honor the memory of Direct Marketing Hall of Fame legend Marty Edelson, he chose Jay Abraham, Gary Bencivenga, Dan Kennedy, Joe Sugarman, Greg Renker and Ken, along with Ken's student Perry Marshall, to represent the very best of the best in all mediums - direct mail, infomercials, catalog sales and Internet.

All that and a phenomenal educator too.

Ken organized and sponsored the first conference ever held on the subject of business on the World Wide Web, way back in 1994.

In 2002, when everyone else in the market had shut down after 9/11, and the Dotcom Crash, and declared that opportunities on the Internet "over", Ken launched the most important and influential Internet marketing seminar series of all time: The System Seminar.

Thousands of students attended over the years from twenty-three countries and five continents and many went on to become leaders in the industry.

In the System Seminar, Ken laid down the fundamentals of Internet marketing still used today: opt-in, email follow up, A/B split testing, knowing your conversion rates, multiple forms of media (text, photos, audio, video), "virtual" seminars, and high quality ad copy.

For more info visit: KenMcCarthy.com

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