What We Forgot for Greed: The Simple Truth The Brady Bunch Knew About Measles in the 1960s

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I remember a time when childhood illnesses were just that—part of childhood. Watching The Brady Bunch, not in reruns but when it aired live, I recall the episode where all the kids caught the measles. There was no panic, no press conferences, no mandates. The kids stayed home, played board games, and recovered with a little rest and care. That wasn’t television fantasy — it reflected how America once handled common illnesses. Measles was a rite of passage, not a national emergency, because most children were healthy enough to handle it. Their immune systems were strong, and parents trusted them to bounce back without pharmaceutical intervention.

Today, that mindset is almost unrecognizable. A few cases of measles trigger media hysteria, government crackdowns, and public fear campaigns. Schools lock down, health officials rush to microphones, and headlines scream of “outbreaks” before a single child shows real symptoms. In a society where two cases can dominate front-page news, it’s clear this isn’t about health — it’s about control and cash flow. Every declared outbreak sets off a chain reaction where Big Pharma, government agencies, media outlets, and tech companies profit from public fear.

But here’s what no one wants to admit: the real crisis isn’t measles — it’s the weakened state of today’s children. We’ve raised a generation fed on ultra-processed foods, glued to screens, deprived of physical activity, and overexposed to synthetic chemicals. Childhood obesity rates have skyrocketed, bringing with them a host of chronic conditions like diabetes, asthma, and inflammation that compromise immune function. These aren’t just lifestyle issues — they are direct assaults on the body’s natural defenses. A child burdened by excess weight and poor nutrition is far less equipped to handle what previous generations shrugged off as minor illnesses.

Decades ago, kids built resilience through real living — fresh air, whole foods, unstructured play, and minimal medical interference. They didn’t need a pharmaceutical schedule of 50+ vaccines by adulthood because their bodies were fortified by nature and nurtured by common sense. Today, we’ve replaced nourishment with convenience, movement with sedentary habits, and immune strength with dependency on drugs and injections. We didn’t suddenly discover that measles or other childhood illnesses were dangerous — we created conditions where even the mildest virus becomes a threat because our children’s systems are too compromised to respond effectively.

This shift didn’t happen by accident. There’s a multi-billion-dollar industry invested in keeping people sick, scared, and dependent. Pharmaceutical giants like Merck profit from every mandated shot. Hospitals and clinics bill for every test and treatment. Government agencies justify bloated budgets through emergency responses. Media companies feast on fear-driven clicks, while tech giants silence dissent to protect these lucrative narratives. Even schools and universities get their cut through compliance grants and research funding.

We’ve allowed a culture to flourish where health is no longer about vitality — it’s about managing decline. The body is treated as defective by design, needing constant pharmaceutical correction. Childhood has been pathologized, and normal immune responses are framed as crises requiring corporate solutions.

The truth is, what’s endangering our children isn’t just exposure to viruses — it’s exposure to a system that profits from their weakness. A system that feeds them processed junk, discourages physical activity, numbs them with screens, and then blames nature when their bodies falter. Instead of addressing the root cause — a toxic environment and a failing food system — we’re told the answer is more shots, more pills, and more fear.

In the 1960s, we didn’t need mass vaccination campaigns for measles because our kids were strong enough to handle it. Today, those same institutions that pushed processed foods, sedentary lifestyles, and over-medication are now selling us the cure for the problems they helped create — demanding trust while silencing anyone who questions the cycle.

If we’re serious about raising healthy children, we have to step outside this profit-driven model. That starts with real food, daily movement, sunlight, sleep, and rebuilding trust in the body’s natural ability to heal. It means rejecting the fear narrative and recognizing that nature isn’t the enemy — but corporate interests might be.

The measles didn’t change. What changed is that we’ve allowed a generation to grow up malnourished, overweight, overstimulated, and overmedicated — and then we act shocked when minor illnesses spark major crises. We could save billions in healthcare costs and avoid endless cycles of panic if we simply returned to common sense: let kids be kids, feed them well, let their bodies do what they’re designed to do, and stop letting fear drive every decision.

Sometimes the most powerful solution isn’t profitable. It’s just practical — like keeping kids home, giving them rest, and trusting that health doesn’t come from a syringe, but from how we live every day.


Disclaimer:

This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not medical advice and does not replace the guidance of a licensed healthcare professional. Readers are encouraged to do their own research and consult with trusted medical providers when making health decisions for themselves and their families.

References

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Measles History and Elimination.https://www.cdc.gov/measles/about/history.html
  2. Los Angeles Times (2015). Disneyland Measles Outbreak Leads to California Vaccine Law.https://www.latimes.com/local/politics/la-me-pc-california-vaccine-bill-final-vote-20150625-story.html
  3. National Institutes of Health (NIH). Changing Patterns in Measles Mortality, U.S., 1960–2000s.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2605179
  4. ProPublica. Big Pharma’s Influence on U.S. Public Health Agencies. https://www.propublica.org/series/dollars-for-doctors
  5. New York Times (2019). NYC Targets Orthodox Jewish Communities in Measles Crackdown.https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/09/nyregion/measles-outbreak-vaccine.html
  6. Harvard Public Health Review. Ultra-Processed Foods and Chronic Disease.https://harvardpublichealthreview.org/ultra-processed-foods
  7. OpenSecrets.org. Pharmaceutical Industry Lobbying Statistics. https://www.opensecrets.org/industries/totals.php?ind=H04
  8. Smithsonian Magazine. The Brady Bunch Measles Episode and Its Cultural Legacy.https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/measles-brady-bunch-vaccine-history-180971076
DAMON K JONES
DAMON K JONEShttps://damonkjones.com
A multifaceted personality, Damon is an activist, author, and the force behind Black Westchester Magazine, a notable Black-owned newspaper based in Westchester County, New York. With a wide array of expertise, he wears many hats, including that of a Spiritual Life Coach, Couples and Family Therapy Coach, and Holistic Health Practitioner. He is well-versed in Mental Health First Aid, Dietary and Nutritional Counseling, and has significant insights as a Vegan and Vegetarian Nutrition Life Coach. Not just limited to the world of holistic health and activism, Damon brings with him a rich 32-year experience as a Law Enforcement Practitioner and stands as the New York Representative of Blacks in Law Enforcement of America.

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