The White House has been
planning, for quite some time, the mass public inoculation of the smallpox vaccine.
They've been claiming for decades our "enemies" could and most likely would
unleash the virus on America.
Less than 10% of America's population was
ever inoculated in the past. The program was put to a halt because of far too many
adverse reactions. Some nearly fatal. Others fatal. According to my
pediatrician, he would do anything to talk me out of this vaccine for my child
because of how hideously contaminated this vaccine is. He stated over 400
contaminating microorganisms.
Yet, our service members are still being
inoculated with the agents. Why? The government claims that the vaccine will
help protect them from the agents that our enemies could unleash on them during war.
This was the reason given for both Gulf Wars, and most likely others prior.
However, one can't forget that enlisting in service also means signing your
body over to the government for them to do with as they please. The military
has been the largest "lab" for experimentation for decades. The events of 9-11
conveniently come into play to not only instill the fear on the general public that
enemies of America could unleash on our country, but to prepare the public for mass
inoculation. Scheduling for such an event is on target and the government has made
all necessary psychological and pharmaceutical preparations.
Twenty Reasons Not to Take Smallpox
Vaccine by
INGRI CASSEL
1. George W. Bush has said of
smallpox vaccination: "One
of my concerns if we were to have universal vaccination, some might lose their life." ~The
Times (in London), November 09, 2001.
2. For each million people
vaccinated with the smallpox vaccine, as many as 250 could die, according to the American
Medical Association. Multiply 250 times 285 (millions of Americans) and the possible
deaths from universal smallpox vaccination could equal 71,250. ~
Journal of the American Medical Association, June 9, 1999, Vol. 281, No. 22, p. 2132.
3. "The American Medical
Association said on Tuesday it was not in favor of an immediate mass U.S.
smallpox vaccination program, saying the potential threat of a bioterror attack
did not warrant inoculating every American against the disease." ~Reuters, December 12, 2001.
4. "Right now the risk of
getting the vaccine is higher than the benefit. You
could get a secondary infection, a full-blown systemic infection." ~Marie Rau,
Panhandle Health District nurse, quoted by The Spokesman-Review, November 20, 2001.
5. CDC director Jeffrey Koplan has admitted
that universal smallpox vaccination could unleash a significant number of side-effects. He
said that because many parts of our population do not have a "robust immune
system," a fair number of people could have serious reactions. ~Koplan speaking on
the PBS special "Bioterror Propaganda" aired by WETA, November 14, 2001.
6. If the entire nation were to receive a smallpox vaccine, several
thousand people would likely develop encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain. ~Washington Post, Dec. 26, 2001.
7. Roger J. Pomerantz, chief of the infectious disease department at Thomas Jefferson
University in Philadelphia, said that doctors have no idea what the smallpox vaccine might
do to people at the extremes of life--less than 2 and older than 65. He said that an even
greater concern would be its effect on people with weakened immune systems from HIV
infection, chemotherapy or transplants. ~Washington Post, Dec. 26, 2001.
8. "Researchers have been reluctant to recommend a new vaccination program which
would use the smallpox vaccine for the local population because the vaccine
can cause disease and death in persons with inadequate immune systems."
~Science, Vol. 277, July 18, 1997, pp. 312-13.
9. Routine smallpox vaccination in the
United States ended in 1972. Officials are hesitant to resume the immunizations because the
vaccine is the most reactive of all and has been linked to
serious side effects, including death. ~ Reuters, November 29, 2001.
10. Eight printed pages of medical studies documenting the many serious side effects of
smallpox vaccination can be obtained at www.whale.to/vaccines/smallpox.html. See
"smallpox vaccine adverse reactions 66-76." [Note: go to the home page above and
put "smallpox vaccine adverse reaction" in the search engine.] Repercussions
include serious brain and heart
diseases, autism, abnormal chromosomal changes, diabetes, various cancers and leukemias,
plus demyelination of nerve tissue years after vaccination.
11. The U.S.
Supreme Court has ruled that vaccination must not be forced on persons whose physical
condition would make such vaccination "cruel and inhuman." In
other words, the state has no right to command that an individual sacrifice his life in
the name of public health. ~Jacobsen V. Massachusetts, 197 U.S. 11 (1905).
12. By the 1920s, several British medical researchers documented that smallpox was not
only more common among the VACCINATED, but that the DEATH
RATE from smallpox was actually higher among those who had been
vaccinated. This indicates that the vaccine was ineffective and predisposed
vaccinated persons to more lethal disease. ~Vaccination,
Dr. Viera Scheibner, Australia, 1993, pp. 205-220.
13. Getting a vaccination does not guarantee immunity. ~CDC, January 28, 1994.
14. By 1987, scientific evidence indicated that the World Health Organization's 13-year
global smallpox vaccination campaign may have awakened dormant HIV infection in many
vaccines. ~Times (in London) May 11, 1987.
15. Vaccines made from animal substrate contain animal viruses that are impossible to
filter out. By 1961, scientists discovered that animal viruses in vaccines, including
smallpox, could act as a carcinogen when given to mice in combination with cancer-causing
chemicals, even in amounts too small to induce tumors alone. They concluded that vaccine
viruses function as a catalyst for tumor production. ~Science,
December 15, 1961.
16. Some of the new smallpox vaccine doses will be created with animal substrate. Because
the vaccine will incorporate vaccinia, the cowpox virus, many wonder about possible mad-cow
contamination. Fifty-five million doses of the new vaccine will be
created using a cell line dating back to 1966 and cultured from the lung
tissues of an aborted human fetus. ~World Net Daily, December
4, 2001.
17. The new smallpox vaccine will be
genetically engineered. Many scientists believe that genetically
engineered vaccines may be responsible for the global epidemic of auto-immune disease and
neurological dysfunction. ~American College of Rheumatology, annual meeting,
Nov. 8-12, 1998. Merck's genetically engineered hepatitis B vaccine,
Recombivax HB, is a classic example.
According to Dr. Bonnie Dunbar of Baylor College of Medicine, many thousands of reported
adverse reactions to the hepatitis B vaccine include: chronic
fatigue, neurological disorders, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and MS-like disease.
~Testimony of Dr. Dunbar to Texas Dept.
of Health, March 12, 1999. Over 15,000 French citizens sued the French government to stop
mandatory hepatitis B injections for school children because of resulting auto-immune
diseases. ~Science, July 31, 1998. Dr. John Classen has published voluminous data showing
that the hepatitis B and other vaccines are closely linked to the development of insulin
dependent diabetes. ~Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice, October 22, 1997.
18. The British vaccine manufacturer Medeva has a horrendous record of contamination and blunders. In
2000, the FDA found that Medeva was making vaccines in conditions of filth, resulting in
contaminated products. Medeva
had been illegally using bovine medium to culture its polio vaccines, then lied about it.
Medeva also used the blood of a Creutzfeldt-Jakob victim (mad cow) to manufacture 83,000
doses of polio vaccine used for (against?) Irish children. Nevertheless, the FDA allowed the USA to accept Medeva's flu vaccine
(Fluvirin) for the year 2000. ~London Observer series: October 20-26, 2000.
19. In 2001, the British socialized health care system was reported to be in a state of
collapse, with many hospitals and labs operating in abysmal filth. Five thousand people
die each year from infections contracted in British hospitals; 10,000
become deathly ill from such infections. Sterilization procedures are barely adequate and
said to be risking the spread of mad cow disease. Government
ministers are reportedly trying to hush up the scandal. www.itn.co.uk/Jan 06, 2001; The
Sunday Times of London, November 12, 2001.
20. The U.S. government apparently intends to conduct NO double
blind studies on the safety and efficacy of the new smallpox vaccine. It
has ordered 286 million doses, one for every man, woman and child in America at a cost of
$428 million. At least half of this vaccine will be delivered by Acambis PLC of great
Britain.
Tip of the Week: Keep all vaccine
needles away from your body!
Vaccination Liberation -
Idaho Chapter Ingri Cassel, President P.O. Box 1444 Coeur d'Alene, ID 83816 (208) 255-2307
/ 765-8421 vaclib@coldreams.comwww.vaclib.org
"The Right to Know, The Freedom to
Abstain"
Selected statements:
Terrorists or governments hostile to the
United States may have, or could obtain, some of the variola virus that causes smallpox
disease. If so, these adversaries could use it as a biological weapon. This potential
along with an appreciation for the potentially devastating consequences of a smallpox
attack, suggests that we should take prudent steps to prepare our critical responders to
protect the American public should an attack occur. People exposed to variola virus, or
those at risk of being exposed, can be protected by vaccinia (smallpox) vaccine. The
United States is taking precautions to deal with this possibility.
State health departments, with guidance from
CDC, will set up vaccination clinics and determine who will be staffing clinics and
administering smallpox vaccine. The number of vaccination sites will be determined in the
state plans, and depends in large part on the demand for the vaccines. CDC is assisting
states with planning, technical assistance and education.
Smallpox vaccinations of DOD personnel will
begin as soon as the vaccine is in place and medical training and troop education have
been accomplished.
Department conducted major vaccination
programs during WWI and WWII and servicemembers were routinely vaccinated from the 1940s
until 1984. In 1984, routine military vaccinations were limited to recruits entering basic
training. Between 1984 and 1990, recruit vaccinations were intermittent. In 1990, the
Department of Defense discontinued vaccination of recruits. Servicemembers
are still getting the smallpox vaccine today!!! Many inoculated servicemembers are
not deployed.
We cannot quantify the threat that
smallpox would be used as a bioweapon, but we do know (choose to tell the public)
that the consequences of its use could be great. Military missions must go on even if a
smallpox outbreak occurs. It may not be feasible to vaccinate military forces soon after
exposure if they are deployed to remote locations and/or engaged in military operations.
Some military personnel will not be able to postpone vital missions if smallpox is used as
a weapon. Vaccination is a wise course for preparedness and may serve as a deterrent.
If someone does not get the expected
vaccination site reaction, they need to be revaccinated. (There
is some seriously wrong with this. There are no studies conclusively stating that
any sign of infection from the inoculation of disease equals immunity in the future.
Think think think! This goes along the same mentality that it is no longer
considered desirable or normal not to have such symptoms. We're been phsycologicaly
trained into thinking and believing that it's normal to literally be sick, it's normal to
have infections, and that it should all be like everyday life.)
It is possible, but not confirmed,
that Iraq possesses the virus that causes smallpox. By protecting ourselves to respond to
any smallpox attack, including through pre-exposure and post-exposure vaccination plans,
we also help deter such attacks. What's the evidence that has led up to the conclusion of
even the possibility? While the government creates the public fear of oversease
governments conspiring such an attach on America, there is the deliberate inoculation of
this potentially deadly virus on our troops. A suspicion based on what?!
smallpox is contagious. Smallpox normally spreads
from contact with infected persons. Generally, direct and fairly
prolonged face-to-face contact is required to spread smallpox from one person to another. People
infected with smallpox exhale small droplets that carry the virus to the nose or mouth of
close contacts. The greatest risk comes from prolonged close contact
exposure (within seven feet) to an infected person. The longer somebody is in close
contact with an infected person, the greater the chance of transmission. Indirect contact
is less likely to transmit the virus,
but infection still can occur via fine-particle aerosols or inanimate objects carrying the
virus. For example, contaminated
clothing or bed linen could spread the virus. Smallpox is
not known to be transmitted by insects or animals.
People are most infectious during the first
week of the rash, but a person with smallpox is sometimes contagious with the onset of
fever (prodome phase). The infected person is contagious until the last smallpox scab
falls off.
A person with smallpox is sometimes
contagious with onset of fever (prodome phase), but the person becomes most contagious
with the onset of rash. The infected person is contagious until the last smallpox scab
falls off.
The smallpox vaccine is not given with a
hypodermic needle. It is not a shot, like many vaccinations. The vaccine is
given using a bifurcated (two-pronged) needle that is dipped into the vaccine solution.
When removed, the needle retains a droplet of the vaccine. The needle is then used to
quickly prick the skin several times for a few seconds. The pricking is not deep, but it
will cause a sore spot and one or two drops of blood to form. The vaccine usually is given
in the upper arm.
If the vaccination is successful, a red and
itchy bump develops at the vaccination site in three or four days. In the first week after
vaccination, the bump becomes a large blister, fills with pus, and begins to drain. During
week two, the blister begins to dry up and a scab forms. The scab falls off in the third
week, leaving a small scar. People who are being vaccinated for the first time may have a
stronger take (a successful reaction) than those who are being revaccinated.
The vaccine is made from a virus called vaccinia, a virus related to smallpox but
that does not cause smallpox. The smallpox vaccine helps the body develop immunity
to smallpox. It does not contain the smallpox virus and cannot spread smallpox.
The smallpox vaccine does contain another
virus called vaccinia, which is live in the vaccine. Because the virus is
live, it can spread to other parts of the body or to other people from the vaccine site.
This can be prevented through proper care of the vaccination site (e.g. hand washing and
careful disposal of used bandages).
The vaccine virus (Vaccinia) is spread by
touching a vaccination site before it has healed or by touching bandages or clothing that
have become contaminated with live virus from the vaccination site. Vaccinia is not spread
through airborne contagion. Proper handling of the vaccine site includes these three key
points:
1. Dont touch your vaccination
site or materials that touched it
2. If you touch either the site or materials in contact with the site by accident, clean
your hands right away.
3. Dont let others touch your vaccination site or materials that touched it
he very fact that states, hospitals and
communities will have vaccination plans for emergency responders and for
mass-vaccinating the general public makes us better prepared to protect Americans
in an emergency.
Those who were vaccinated previously may
have a lower risk of adverse reactions. It is appropriate for individuals, in deciding
whether to be vaccinated, to consider whether they were vaccinated previously.
Vaccine Safety
How safe is the smallpox vaccine?
The smallpox vaccine is the best protection
you can get if you are exposed to the smallpox virus. (This is not historically
evident with ANY of the recommended childhood vaccines, infuenza or the small pox vaccine
program involving the public and previously halted.) Most people experience
normal, usually mild, reactions, such as sore arm, fever, headache, body ache, and
fatigue. These symptoms may peak eight to 12 days after vaccination.
In the past, about 1,000 people for
every 1,000,000 (1 million) vaccinated people experienced reactions that were serious, but
not life-threatening. Most involved spread of virus elsewhere on the body.
In the past, between 14 and 52
people out of 1,000,000 vaccinated for the first time experienced potentially
life-threatening reactions. These reactions included serious skin reactions and
inflammation of the brain (encephalitis). From past experience, one or two people in 1
million who receive smallpox vaccine may die as a result. (We are a populations of over 2 hundred 80 million. We
could be looking at minimum of 280 life threatening reactions)
Careful screening of potential vaccine
recipients is essential to ensure that those at increased risk do not receive the vaccine.
People most likely to have side effects are
people who have, or even once had, skin conditions, (especially eczema or atopic
dermatitis) and people with weakened immune systems, such as those who have received a
transplant, are HIV positive, or are receiving treatment for cancer. Anyone who falls
within these categories, or lives with someone, who falls into one of these categories,
should NOT get the smallpox vaccine unless they are exposed, or at risk of exposure, to
the disease. In addition, anyone who falls within the following categories should not get
the smallpox vaccine unless they are exposed or at risk of exposure: pregnant women,
breastfeeding mothers, anyone who is allergic to the vaccine or any of its components, and
anyone under the age of 18. This is not regularly practiced concerning the
influenza vaccine for children/adults. Infact, this is not practiced with MANY
vaccines. All product inserts state that immunocompromised individuals should not be
inoculated with their vaccines. Yet, this is so typically disregarded by
physicians. Many austic and other immunocompromised children and adults are still
given the influenza and other vaccines with the "explanation" that the vaccine
will strengthen their clearly compromised immune system. Recommendations are
typically broadened by Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. Can we honestly
trust that such considerations will be put into practice with this hideous vaccine?
So your estimate is that at least one
person per million will die as a result of this vaccine?
This is a statistical estimate based on
prior experience with the vaccine. However, we will work hard to prevent even these rare
events from happening. Severe reactions can be minimized by screening people for bars to
vaccination before vaccinating them and closely monitoring individuals for severe
reactions with prompt treatment as necessary.
(Basically, the answer is yes....we
could be looking at that many deaths...minimum of 280. Remember that the statistics
are not always accurate due to GROSS UNDER REPORTING)
Is there any way to treat bad reactions
to the vaccine?
Two treatments may help people who have
certain serious reactions to the smallpox vaccine. These are Vaccinia Immune Globulin
(VIG) and Cidofovir. We will have more than 2,700 treatment doses of VIG (enough for
predicted reactions with more than 27 million people) at the end of December, and 3,500
doses of Cidofovir (enough for prediction reactions with 15 million people).
Has FDA approved the use of 15 pricks to
vaccinate both primary vaccinees and revacinees? If not, will this approval have come
before DoD begins to vaccinate troops?If it does not, will DoD be giving 15 pricks to 1st
time vaccinees under IND? (The current package insert states 3 pricks for primary
vaccinees and 15 pricks for revaccinees).
CDC and others are currently in the process
of submitting data to the FDA to support changing the recommendation of 3 needle sticks
for primary vaccinations to 15 needle sticks for both primary and revaccination. It is
important to note that during the smallpox eradication period, the World Health
Organization (WHO) program utilized 15 needle sticks universally to avoid confusion and to
help decrease the number of vaccine take failures from flaws in vaccine administration
techniques. However, until the FDA approves a package insert change, vaccinators should
follow the instructions found on the vaccine package insert on the number of needle sticks
to administer for primary vaccines and revaccinees.
What should I expect at the vaccination
site?
If the vaccination is successful, a red and itchy bump develops at the vaccination site in three
or four days. In the first week after vaccination, the bump becomes a large blister, fills
with pus, and begins to drain. During week two, the blister begins to dry up and a scab
forms. The scab falls off in the third week, leaving a small scar. People
who are being vaccinated for the first time may have a stronger take (a
successful reaction) than those who are being revaccinated. Most people experience normal,
usually mild, reactions, such as sore arm, fever, headache, body ache, and fatigue. These
symptoms may peak eight to 12 days after vaccination. The vaccine virus (vaccinia) is
present on the skin at the vaccination site until the scab falls off. One must take care
not to touch it so that the vaccine virus (vaccinia) is not spread elsewhere, especially
to the eyes, nose, mouth, genitalia or rectum.
All the symptoms are the body's way
of getting rid of the inoculated poisons. Thus, such symptoms don't equal immunity
to the virus. There's no conclusive evidence that this actually provides ANY level
of immunity.
Are there any side effects of the
vaccine?
Yes, side effects can result from smallpox
vaccination. Mild reactions include swelling and tender lymph nodes that can last two to
four weeks after the blister heals. Up to 20 percent of people develop headache, fatigue,
muscle aches, pain, or chills after smallpox vaccination, usually about eight to 12 days
later. Some individuals may have rashes that last two to four days. These side effects are
usually temporary and self-limiting, meaning they go away on their own or with minimal
medical treatment, for example aspirin and rest.
In the past, about 1,000 people for every
1,000,000 (1 million) vaccinated people experienced reactions that were serious, but not
life-threatening. Most involved spread of virus elsewhere on the body.
In the past, between 14 and 52
people out of 1,000,000 vaccinated for the first time experienced potentially
life-threatening reactions. These reactions included serious skin reactions and
inflammation of the brain (encephalitis). From past experience, one or two people in 1
million who receive smallpox vaccine may die as a result.
Medical experts believe that with careful
screening, monitoring and early intervention the number of serious adverse reactions can
be minimized.
What's the early intervention that
will effectively prevent adverse reactions? Think think think....every human body
reacts differently to the inoculation of poisons. Every individual has a different
genetic make. Has science been able to identify such detailed information of every
human being that they've also been able to come up with a way to manipulate the body
from having a life threatening reaction to an inoculated poisoness cocktail? How is
that possible?