the moderate forms of dementia shorten the life expectancy. This estimate of the prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease has been based on conservative assumptions."15
By far, the disease that appears to be almost exclusively a stigma of the "developed" countries is multiple sclerosis.
"No well-documented case of multiple sclerosis has ever been reported in African blacks."16
However, the prevalence of multiple sclerosis among immigrants to the Republic of South Africa from United Kingdom and other parts of northern and central Europe was approximately 49 per 100,000 population. In a study showing the local epidemiology of the disease, the areas in which it appears most prevalent (high-risk zones) include Northern Europe, North America and Southern Canada. What better example could we have than this? It actually shows us that well-developed countries, countries in which the human organism has been manipulated with myriad drugs and vaccinations, are now having serious health problems.
It is my suspicion that multiple sclerosis is the result of vaccination. Countries where vaccination was introduced long ago have a very high incidence of multiple sclerosis, whereas in Arab and African countries, which did not introduce vaccination as early, we find almost no incidence of multiple sclerosis.
Alter, studying the immigrants and native-born Jewish populations of Israel, noted that while the disease was rare among the native Israelis and immigrants from other Near East countries and North Africa, it is considerably more prevalent among immigrants from Central Europe, and was even more frequent among those from Northern Europe. Further study of immigration data revealed that age at immigration appeared to play an extremely important role. A person leaving his country of origin before the age of 15 years would have a risk of acquiring multiple sclerosis similar to that of the native-born Israeli or South African; an individual immigrating after that age would carry with him the risk factor of his country of origin. Another study demonstrated a major difference in the prevalence of multiple sclerosis among Afro-Asian immigrants and their Israeli-born offspring. In the latter group, there was a twofold increase in prevalence within just one generation. Thus native-born Israelis of either European or Afro-Asian origin now have