— PART ONE —
The Adult Vaccinations
Introduction to Bugs, Gas, and Nukes
In the Western World, the experts tell us the threat today is
"bugs," "gas," and "nukes." In the first half of
this book, we will examine two of these dangerous substances, considered to be
the most likely to be used in an attack on us: smallpox and anthrax, and
especially the vaccines used to protect against them.
But, before doing that, here is a brief overview of what is
included in all three types of terrorist weapons:
THE BUGS: BIOLOGICAL AGENTS
Certain bacteria, viruses and toxins could be used as
weapons, though most agents are difficult to process into lethal forms:
Anthrax is an infectious, but not contagious, disease that would most
likely be spread by aerosol (sprayed in the air). This is because it is most
dangerous when breathed
into the lungs. It causes respiratory failure and death.
Antibiotics help only if given early.
Smallpox is very hard to grow and aerosolize. The fact
that it is so contagious and so deadly is what makes it so dangerous.
In the first half of this book, we will learn the truth about
anthrax and smallpox vaccines.
Plague: Bubonic plague could be delivered via
contaminated vectors (like fleas) or by aerosol. Vaccines exist, but their
efficacy against aerosolized plague is unknown.
Botulinum: This toxin can cause respiratory failure and
death, but lethal strains are hard to grow and weaponize. It is not contagious.
Cholera: This bacteria is stable in water and could be
used to contaminate reservoirs. It can be treated with antibiotics.
Brucellosis: This is primarily a cattle disease and could
be spread by aerosol. It is not transmittable from persons to persons, and
antibiotics are ineffective. It would primarily be used to destroy a nation’s
livestock.
THE GAS: CHEMICAL AGENTS
While some toxic agents are commercially available and can be
dispersed with a simple truck, others are more technically challenging to
produce and disperse.
Mustard gas: First used in World War I, this causes
blisters and can be fatal if inhaled. The chemical ingredients are difficult to
obtain.
Hydrogen cyanide: This is a blood agent used worldwide in
the manufacture of acrylic polymers. It was reportedly used by the Iraqis
against the Iranians in the late 1980s.
Sarin: This is a nerve agent developed during World War
II, and causes respiratory failure. In 1995, a Japanese cult killed 12 people in
a Tokyo subway with it.
CS: This is the most widely used tear gas, for riot control, that is used
throughout the world. It can be lethal, but only if inhaled in very high
concentrations, especially inside buildings. This, by the way, is the gas which
was heavily pumped into the Branch Davidian headquarters in Waco. The U.S.
citizens inside did not come out; therefore they died.
Phosgene: This is the most dangerous of the group, which
are called choking agents. It accounted for 80% of all chemical deaths during
World War I.
Soman: This nerve agent made up much of the former Soviet
Union’s chemical arsenal. Production began in 1967. Iraq may have it today.
THE NUKES: RADIOACTIVE AGENTS
These could be delivered in the form of nuclear bomb
explosions, or "dirty bombs" which are exploded by dynamite and spread
radiation.
Plutonium: A fissile material used to produce nuclear
bombs.
Cesium: One of the more commonly smuggled radioactive
materials, but it does not explode.
Cobalt: This is used in medical laboratories, is
relatively easy to smuggle, and could be very dangerous.
Uranium 235: This is highly enriched uranium, another fissile material.
It is extremely dangerous, both in "dirty bombs" and in nuclear
explosions.
— CHAPTER ONE —
Danger of Forced Adult Vaccination
It is well-known among knowledgeable medical personnel that,
at the present time, smallpox vaccine is not a safe thing to take into a
person’s body. Even worse is anthrax vaccine. This book will explain exactly
what both are like.
Forced immunization. A proposed federal act, widely
discussed since fall 2001, would, if a crisis developed, require every U.S.
citizen to receive smallpox and/or anthrax vaccinations.
The U.S. military plans to vaccinate all our military
personnel with anthrax vaccine before 2005. In chapter 3, you will learn why
that should not be done.
However, the immediate concern is about smallpox. The U.S.
government has a strong interest in having 500,000 medical workers receive the
smallpox vaccine, and later the general population. So just below, and in the
next chapter, attention will be focused on the smallpox vaccine.
Those vaccinations could be disastrous to many people.
Because so many are living on fast food, junk food, tobacco, alcohol, and street
drugs, many Americans are not physically ready, even for a smallpox vaccination.
Yet many like the idea. A poll taken in the summer of 2002 by
the Harvard School of Public Health found that 81% of the public would get
vaccinated if the smallpox vaccine were available.
Dangers of mass vaccination. Here is how one news magazine described it:
"The pressing ‘post-9/11 question’ is how the
public can best be protected—with the least risk—in the event of a
bioterrorist attack involving smallpox . .
"After the anthrax scare, the government ordered some
210 million [smallpox] doses, and by year’s end there will be enough for
most Americans. But about 38 million Americans can’t be vaccinated because
of health risks, including . . compromised immune systems."—"How
Small a Pox?" U.S. News and World Report, June 17, 2002.
The article also discusses how smallpox vaccines can cause
encephalitis (brain inflammation) or outright death.
According to Patricia Doyle, Ph.D., 55 million doses of the
smallpox vaccine, which the government is planning to have Americans take in
order to protect them, have been made by Acambis. Aborted human fetal embryo
tissue was used in their preparation. This is not only a concern for
right-to-life advocates; but, because it will be injected directly into the
bloodstream, DNA modifications could be induced in the recipients.
MASS VACCINATION AHEAD
Background. Smallpox has not existed in nature for 25
years; so the only way it could return is through deliberate release by
terrorists. Unfortunately, our leaders believe this may soon happen.
This subject is very serious, and you should read the
following information carefully.
Smallpox may be the worst disease ever known to man. It
killed about half a billion people from 1880 to 1980, before it was eradicated.
The smallpox vaccine is also deadly. Scientists call it the most dangerous
vaccine known to man.
The vaccine was developed in 1796, and is essentially the same today. All the
vaccines we use today are the result of modern technology. But the smallpox
vaccine is different, and may have severe side effects.
Here is an example of how dangerous it is: If you scratch
where the fresh vaccine pox is and put it into your eye, you can transfer
smallpox to the eye. If some of the fluid from it touches another person, he may
contract the disease. If you get "progressive vaccinia," your immune
system is compromised; the virus continues to grow, and is often the cause of
death.
The last U.S. case of smallpox was recorded in 1949. By the
late 1970s, smallpox was said to be wiped out worldwide. There has not been a
human case of smallpox anywhere in the world since 1977. It has been 31 years
since smallpox vaccinations ceased to be given in the United States. All
Americans born after 1971 are vulnerable; and it is likely that those inoculated
prior to 1971 are no longer immune.
U.S. intelligence experts believe that several foreign
governments have’ samples of the smallpox virus and could use them as
biological weapons on American soldiers. Terrorist attacks involving smallpox in
the U.S. homeland are also feared. Smallpox agents would be a powerful tool in a
terrorist arsenal. The virus kills 30% of its victims. It is highly contagious,
and medical authorities declare that there is no known treatment other than
vaccination.
There were many different strains of the disease; but the
most virulent strains tended, on average, to kill about a third of their
victims. Some people developed rare forms of smallpox, such as the hemorrhagic
form, which is almost universally fatal.
Foreign stockpiles. According to the United Nations,
there are only two legal repositories for the deadly smallpox virus. One is the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta. The other is at Vector in
western Siberia.
The repository in Russia was not carefully guarded from 1990 to 1999, and it
is believed that supplies of smallpox virus were either stolen or purchased from
guards. But, more recently, security at the site has been beefed up.
At the present time, there are three different high fences
surrounding that Siberian storage site, and entrance can only be made by
permission of armed guards through a large steel entrance.
In addition, there is evidence that some of the Russian
scientists have been lured by Iran and Iraq into moving there and helping them
build stockpiles.
We know, from senior Russian defectors, that Russia had a
very large biological weapons program, including the weaponization of literally
tons of smallpox during the 1980s and before. It is very unlikely that every
last gram of that material has been accounted for. All this is the basis of
major government concern.
On November 10, 2002, the Washington Post quoted U.S.
intelligence sources as saying that four other nations have secret stocks of
smallpox virus: Iraq; North Korea; Russia; and, a surprise, France (although
French officials deny it). It is believed that, by purchase or theft, they got
their stockpiles from Russia, probably since 1991.
We know that Iraq was vaccinating its troops at the time of
the Gulf War. This would indicate that, back then, it already had stockpiles and
was preparing to use them if Baghdad was attacked by allied forces.
Later investigators found that Iraqi officials had ordered a
freeze dryer that was labeled "smallpox" in Arabic, although the
Iraqis claimed they had been producing vaccine and not the virus itself.
The Iraqis did admit that they had been working with camelpox,
which is a very close genetic relative of smallpox. Although it does not cause
appreciable illness in humans, there was some speculation that perhaps camelpox
was being used as a surrogate, a safe-model virus that could be used to develop
weaponization and delivery techniques for actually delivering human smallpox as
a weapon.
Now that the 2003 Iraqi War is over, the danger from Iraqi
smallpox stockpiles is not a thing of the past. It is very possible that they
have not yet been found. It would be relatively easy to hide them.
Decision to vaccinate. For several months, an internal
argument was carried on in the U.S. government, concerning what to do about this
problem. The vice president led out in expressing concern about terrorism and
the need for vaccinating Americans, as a preventative measure. On the other side
was the public health community, especially the Centers for Disease Control in
Atlanta, who have consistently been extremely concerned about the dangers of
inoculating Americans, either health workers or the public, with the smallpox
vaccine. More on these dangers below.
But, because of the serious danger of a smallpox attack by
terrorists, the White House won. Recently the CDC released a plan for mass
vaccination in the event of a smallpox outbreak. But, unless an actual attack
occurs, the government fears to carry out mass vaccination of the U.S. public.
Too many illnesses and deaths could occur.
Vaccination dangers. The problem is that the vaccine,
although highly effective, is associated with a significant risk of
complications. We know that, years ago, about 15 people per million developed
very serious complications and roughly two per million died from the vaccine
itself. But it is believed that a far greater number would become ill or die
from the vaccine, if it were given today.
First, in people with an impaired immune system, the vaccine
virus can replicate out of control and cause serious illness and even death.
Second, there are far more people today who have impaired immune systems! We are
here dealing with a live virus vaccine. This is what makes it dangerous.
Those especially at risk by receiving a smallpox vaccination
are children under 10, those with HIV and other immune system disorders,
patients taking cancer chemotherapy, those on steroids and other immune-lowering
drugs for rheumatoid arthritis and other autoimmune disorders, those with a
history of eczema, and pregnant women.
Authorities advise caution, such as wearing a special plastic dressing over
the vaccination scar for several weeks, in order to prevent vaccinia virus from
accidentally infecting others.
Under White House pressure, in late October, the Food and
Drug Administration quietly approved the use of available vaccine stocks. That
made it possible to begin vaccinating Americans. But, after U.S.
troops head overseas, who inside America, should be vaccinated first?
Recognizing the terrible threat of a smallpox attack in early
2003, the administration struggled with the question of how many people should
be vaccinated in advance of a terrorist release of the disease.
Why the urgency to vaccinate. Many in the public health
community could not figure out why the Bush administration was moving closer to
large-scale vaccinations, when the virus was so hazardous while the likelihood
of a smallpox attack was so little known.
The answer to this puzzle lies in two facts: First, the Bush
administration had a sizeable amount of secret intelligence, gathered through
the CIA, FBI, and other sources. The possibility of such an attack is very real.
Second, the White House has known that, as soon as it attacks
Iraq—which it fully intends to do—Saddam Hussein would be very likely to
have agents, already implanted in the U.S., release smallpox within our borders.
On November 27, the White House confirmed reports from state
health departments, that large-scale smallpox vaccinations of health care
workers could begin before the end of 2002. The plan was to vaccinate half a
million of them.
The risks of vaccinating nurses, doctors, and other civilian
health care workers against a possible smallpox threat has been the subject of
intense debate.
Two deadlines were initially set for the new plans. One was
for states to submit plans by December 1st on how nearly all Americans could be
vaccinated, soon after an attack.
Unknown effects. A second date, December 9th or shortly thereafter, was
set to begin the first phase of vaccinating about half a million health care
workers. These would be the people, mostly in hospitals, who would receive the
first cases of smallpox in the event of an attack. Yet it would also include
many public health officials in every state who would go out and investigate
possible cases.
The unexpected part of the new deadline was that all states
had been told to be ready to do this vaccinating within 30 days after the
program began.
This announcement came as a shock to knowledgeable state
health officials. They had been hoping, and even expecting, to be able to do it
more slowly and methodically because they wanted to monitor closely for side
effects.
Although, decades ago, a half million people could be
vaccinated with smallpox vaccine, with only one or two deaths and a half dozen
or so life-threatening complications, the situation is different now. It is
known that far too many people today have weaker immune systems.
A deepening crisis. How many people in the U.S. are now
protected by previous smallpox vaccinations? Theoretically it could be tens of
millions of Americans, for most of us over 30 were vaccinated decades ago. But
it is not clear, after all those years, whether any of those people would still
have residual immunity to smallpox.
If you are an older person, how can you tell if you have ever
had a smallpox vaccination? There will be a small telltale scar, usually on your
left (sometimes right) shoulder,
As of December 2002, the plan was to vaccinate about a
hundred health care workers in each U.S. hospital. Thus inoculated, they would
be able to safely treat a potential of thousands of Americans who might contract
smallpox from terrorists. But on December 18, under intense pressure from
hospitals, physicians, and medical workers, the government relented and said the
vaccination of medical workers would, at this time, be voluntary.
Yet, even if it is voluntary, this would not be like getting
a flu shot. The smallpox vaccine is a live virus; and the flu vaccine has dead
virus.
The vaccination process. The type of virus in the live virus vaccine is
not derived from smallpox virus itself, but
from a cousin (a related virus, called vaccinia, which,
scientists tell us, replicates in the skin and produces good immunity that
cross-reacts and protects against smallpox infection).
For this purpose, a special needle is required. It is a
bifurcated needle that looks like a very small shrimp fork. It is dipped into
the live vaccine and then, using it, the skin is punctured in a circular fashion
in order to try to induce an irritant to the skin. The wound oozes virus for
about three weeks. The smallpox vaccine produces, what is called, a
"controlled infection," related to smallpox.
All during that three weeks, the wound is covered with a
bandage and changed daily. The scar will have to be examined frequently to make
sure the infection is not out of control. As long as the scar remains small,
everything is doing well; but, if it festers too much, a severe sickness could
develop. Anyone receiving the vaccination, who has a low immunity level, is in
danger of contracting the disease.
Human immune systems generally fight off the vaccinia,
then develop immunity to vaccinia and the related smallpox. But some people’s
immune systems cannot combat the virus, and vaccinia itself becomes a
potentially deadly infection that spreads.
Infecting others. As if that was not enough of a problem,
there is also the problem of "first responders." These are the people
who will be initially vaccinated. For a brief period, about three weeks, they
will be able to infect others they meet with smallpox!
Indeed, everyone who is vaccinated—whether it be hospital
workers or anyone else—should limit their exposure to others, so that the
virus will not spread.
Those who have impaired immune systems will be especially
liable to dangerous infection. This, of course, could include many of the
patients in the workers’ hospitals, weakened as they are by various diseases,
infections, and recent surgeries.
The American Academy of Pediatrics opposes vaccinating children now, citing a
lack of suitable testing. So apparently that may not be done. But they could
still contract it from those who have been vaccinated. The immune system of
small children is often precarious.
When health care workers, or anyone else, is vaccinated, they
will need to remain home for three weeks so they will not infect others.
What happened in Israel. When the nation of Israel
recently vaccinated its health care workers, about 20% developed health
problems. That is a large number, one in five. About 30% missed one or more days
of work.
We learned from their experience that many who were
vaccinated felt sickish about six days later. They had redness, swelling, fever,
and flu-like symptoms. Many ached, felt sore, and could not move their arms very
well. How would hospital workers—or the rest of us—manage for several weeks
in such a condition?
People who have eczema, asthma, AIDS, or another
immune-deficiency disease should not be vaccinated or get near anyone who has
been.
Considering all that is involved, by December 26, 2002, the
Israeli government decided that it was too risky to vaccinate its 3.5 million
citizens against smallpox. This decision was made, in spite of the forthcoming
U.S.-Iraq War,
If terrorists strike. If, due to terrorism or our own
mass vaccinations, an actual outbreak of smallpox were to occur, then millions
would want to be vaccinated.
If they developed complications, they could be treated with
an antidote to the vaccine called VIG, vaccinia immune globulin. That is
what was done in Israel. Yet, in spite of the antidote, serious problems still
developed.
Today there are so many more people who are infected with
HIV, eczema, asthma, and other reduced immunity problems, that far more
individuals would potentially be susceptible to serious complications from the
smallpox vaccine.
Federal officials favor offering vaccines to the general public after 10
million health care workers have been inoculated and once the vaccine is
licensed in 2004 for general use.
Unable to meet the crisis. On September 24, 2002, the New
York Times discussed what would happen if terrorist smallpox was released
here, and efforts were made to mass vaccinate the general public:
"The new guidelines for states on mass smallpox
vaccinations are most notable for what was omitted. Unanswered and often
unaddressed are critical questions like timing, costs, feasibility and the
multiple problems of preparing health care workers to conduct vaccinations and
communicating the plans to the public . .
"Dr. Mohammed Akhter, executive director of the
American Public Health Association, called the plan good but questioned its
feasibility. ‘This is a huge and massive undertaking, the likes of which
we’ve never seen in our history,’ Dr. Akhter said. If a smallpox attack
came tonight, he added, ‘there’s no way the state and local health
departments would be able to implement the plan . .
"Jonathan B. Tucker, a germ-weapons expert in
Washington . . said, ‘A real potential problem is how you ensure that a
vaccination process is orderly and people don’t panic.’ Mr. Tucker said,
‘What we saw last fall with the anthrax attacks, which were much less
threatening than a smallpox outbreak would be, was public hysteria. In the
context of a vaccination campaign, that would be very problematic’ . .
"In theory, during a deadly outbreak, mass smallpox
vaccinations can protect many people: The vaccine is one of the few
immunizations that can work even if a person is already infected. The vaccine
can fully protect people if given within four days of exposure to the virus.
"The new plan addresses only the most comprehensive response to an
outbreak of the contagious disease, which kills about one in three victims. It
does not address giving vaccinations to anyone before an attack or an outbreak,
only afterward . .
"Dr. Tucker added . . ‘It’s very unclear whether
CDC or the states are developing the necessary communication strategy to
prevent panic in the event of an outbreak’ . . The general goal is to be
ready to vaccinate every American by the end of this year. Acambis, a company
in Cambridge, England, is making 209 million doses of the vaccine for the
[U.S.] federal government . . Dr. Akhter, of the public health group, said an
even bigger unknown was who in Washington would make the decision to begin
mass vaccinations and how that decision would be communicated."—New
York Times, September 24, 2002.
Not protect against terrorist smallpox. In chapters 3 and
4, you will learn why no anthrax vaccine we could make will protect us against
anthrax brought to us by a terrorist. The same applies to smallpox. It is
documented that there are over a thousand strains of anthrax, plus genetically
modified ones. It is also relatively easy for a terrorist nation to prepare
various strains of smallpox, which no vaccine can resist.
An oral vaccine. In the testing stage is an oral smallpox
drug. Current smallpox drugs require intravenous injections, making them
impossible to distribute quickly. It is said that the first oral smallpox drug
will be much more effective, reportedly offering complete protection in 24
hours. Safety trials on the new drug are next.
However, it should be kept in mind that the oral polio
vaccine, placed on the market in the late 1950s, was at first thought to be far
superior to the injected form developed nearly a decade earlier. But the oral
form ultimately turned out to be far more dangerous! Just because a drug company
claims a forthcoming smallpox drug will be more effective does not mean it will
be safer.
American opinion. Since they lack much of the information on the subject
which you have just read, half of all Americans, according to a recent poll,
would choose vaccination if given the option.
Millions to be vaccinated. The latest news, as of
December 12, 2002, is that the government plans to start vaccinating 500,000 of
our troops in January, to be followed, at some later time, by vaccinations of
500,000 U.S. medical workers. Eventually, the vaccine will be made available to
the general public. At the present time it is said that only those of the
general public who wish to be vaccinated will be.
THE PROPOSED FORCED VACCINATION LAW
As we consider the seriousness of the smallpox vaccine,
Section 504 (1) of the Model State Emergency Health Powers Act should be
kept in mind. According to it, the day may come when the U.S. government, under
the compulsion of a national terrorist emergency, may decide to force
Americans to be vaccinated for smallpox. This is the wording:
"(1) In general. To compel a person to be vaccinated
and/or treated for an infectious disease [underlining mine]" (p. 28).
Keep in mind that this "Act" has not yet been voted
into law by the U.S. Congress. It is waiting in the wings for a time of national
emergency. Then it will be enacted and, we regret to say, enforced.
The Model State Emergency Health Powers Act, dated
October 23, 2001, was prepared by the Center for Law and the Public’s Health
at Georgetown University (Washington, D.C.) and Johns Hopkins University
(Baltimore), in collaboration with the National Governors Association, National
Conference of State Legislatures, Association of State and Territorial Health
Officials, and the National Association of Attorneys General.
The Act was drafted and reviewed by the above governmental structures, so
that it would be ready for immediate passage in time of national attack from
foreign powers. The complete Act is 38 8½ x 11-size pages in length. A health
threat is suggested as one reason for the emergency powers to be granted at
that time, in order to deal with insubordinate citizens.
The plan was for individual states to enact this law at a
time of crisis rather than Congress. What would be required for any State
legislature to enact this Health Powers Act? Simply wave the set of papers
before the eyes of frightened legislators and ask them to enact it, so it could
be quickly sent to the governor’s desk for signing into law. It may already
have been quietly enacted in some states. Many of the provisions are
understandable; others appear to violate personal property, personal movement,
and health rights.
Here are portions of the Model State Emergency Health Powers
Act:
"Preamble: Emergency health threats, including those
caused by bioterrorism and epidemics, require the exercise of extraordinary
government functions. Because each state is responsible for safeguarding the
health, security, and well-being of its people, State governments must be able
to respond, rapidly and effectively, to potential or actual public health
emergencies. The Model State Emergency Health Powers Act (the ‘Act’)
therefore grants specific emergency powers to State governors and public health
authorities" [p. 6].
"The Act authorizes the collection of data and records,
the control of property, the management of persons, and access to
communications" [p. 6].
"Public health laws and our courts have traditionally
balanced the common good with individual civil liberties . . The Act strikes
such a balance. It provides State officials with the ability to prevent, detect,
manage, and contain emergency health threats without unduly interfering with
civil rights and liberties" [pp. 6-7].
"Section 103. Purposes. The purposes of this Act
are—(a) To authorize the collection of data and records, the control of
property, the management of persons, and access to communications. (b) To
facilitate the early detection of a health emergency and allow for immediate
investigation of such an emergency by granting access to individuals’ health
information under specified circumstances. (c) To grant State officials the
authority to use and appropriate property as necessary for the care, treatment
and housing of patients, and for the destruction of contaminated materials. (d)
To grant State officials the authority to provide care and treatment to persons
who are ill or who have been exposed to infection" [p.
9].
"Section 201. Reporting illness or health
condition. A health care provider, coroner, or medical examiner shall report
all cases of persons who harbor any illness or health condition that may be
caused by bioterrorism, epidemic or pandemic disease, or novel and highly fatal
infectious agents or biological toxins" [p. 12].
"Pharmacists. A pharmacist shall report any
unusual or increased prescription rates, unusual types of prescriptions, or
unusual trends in pharmacy visits" [p. 12].
"Manner of reporting. The
report shall be made in writing within twenty-four hours to the public health
authority" [p. 12].
"Section 303. Emergency powers. During a State of
public health emergency, the governor may (1) Suspend the provisions of any
regulatory statute prescribing procedures for conducting State business or the
orders, rules, and regulations of any State agency . . (2) Utilize all available
resources of the State government and its political subdivisions, as reasonably
necessary to respond to the public health emergency . . (4) Mobilize all or any
part of the organized militia [police, national guard, etc.] into service of the
State" [p. 17].
"Coordination. The public health authority shall coordinate all
matters pertaining to the public health emergency response of the State . .
[including] collaborating with relevant federal
government authorities, elected officials of other states, private
organizations, or private sector companies" [p.
17].
"Access to and control of facilities and
property—generally. The public health authority may exercise, for such
period as the state of public health emergency exists, the following powers
concerning facilities, materials, roads, or public areas—
"(a) Use of facilities. To procure, by
condemnation or otherwise, construct, lease, transport, store, maintain,
renovate, or distribute materials and facilities as may be reasonable and
necessary for emergency response, with the right to take immediate possession
thereof. Such materials and facilities include, but are not limited to,
communication devices, carriers, real estate, fuels, food, clothing, and health
care facilities.
"Section 402. Access to and control of facilities and
property—generally. (b) Use of health care facilities. To compel a
health care facility to provide services or the use of its facility if such
services or use are reasonable and necessary to emergency response. The use of
the health care facility may include transferring the management and supervision
of the health care facility to the public health authority for a limited or
unlimited period of time" [p. 20].
"(c) Control of materials. To control, restrict,
and regulate by rationing and using quotas, prohibitions on shipments, price
fixing, allocation or other means, the use, sale, dispensing, distribution, or
transportation of food, fuel, clothing and other commodities, alcoholic
beverages, firearms, explosives, and combustibles, as may be reasonable and
necessary for emergency response.
"(d) Control of roads and public areas. (1) To prescribe routes,
modes of transportation, and destinations in connection with evacuation of
persons or the provision of emergency services. (2) To control ingress and
egress [entrance and exit] to and from any stricken or threatened public area,
the movement of persons within the area, and the occupancy of premises
therein" [p. 21].
"Safe disposal of infectious waste . . (b) Control
of facilities. To compel any business or facility authorized to collect . .
infectious waste . . to accept infectious waste, or provide services . .
"(c) Use of facilities. To procure, by
condemnation or otherwise, any business or facility authorized to collect . .
infectious waste . . with the right to take immediate possession thereof" [pp.
21-22].
"Section 404. Safe disposal of corpses . . (b) Possession.
To take possession or control of any corpse . . (c) Control of
facilities. To compel any business or facility authorized to embalm, bury,
cremate . . to accept any corpse or provide the use of its business or
facility" [p. 22].
"Control of health care supplies . . (b) Rationing
. . In making rationing or other supply and distribution decisions, the public
health authority may give preference to health care providers, disaster response
personnel, and mortuary staff" [p. 23].
"Section 406. Compensation. The State shall pay
just compensation to the owner of any facilities or materials that are lawfully
taken or appropriated . . Compensation shall not be provided for facilities or
materials that are closed, evacuated, decontaminated, or destroyed when there is
reasonable cause to believe that they may endanger the public health" [p.
24].
"Section 501. Control of individuals. During a
state of public health emergency, the public health authority shall use every
available means to prevent the transmission of infectious disease and to ensure
that all cases of infectious disease are subject to proper control and
treatment.
"In Section 501, the text immediately following the
heading ‘Control of individuals’ was adapted from California Health &
Safety Code § 120575 (West 1996).
"Section 502. Mandatory medical examinations. The
public health authority may exercise, for such period as the state of public
health emergency exists, the following emergency powers over persons—
"(1) Individual examination or testing. To compel
a person to submit to a physical examination and/or testing as necessary to
diagnose or treat the person [underlining mine] . .
"(3) The medical examination and/or testing shall be
performed immediately upon the order of the public health authority without
resort to judicial or quasi-judicial authority.
"(4) Any person refusing to submit to the medical
examination and/or testing is liable for a misdemeanor . . The public health
authority may subject the individual to isolation or quarantine as provided in
this Article" [p. 26].
"Section 503. Isolation and quarantine . . (c) Due
process . . (2) The public health authority may isolate or quarantine a
person without first obtaining a written ex parte order from the court if
any delay in the isolation or quarantine of the person would pose an immediate
threat to the public health" [p. 27].
"Section 504. Vaccination and treatment. The
public health authority may exercise, for such period as the state of public
health emergency exists, the following emergency powers over persons—
"(1) In general. To compel a person to be vaccinated
and/or treated for an infectious disease [underlining mine]" [p.
28].
"Section 702. Public Health Emergency Plan. (a) Content.
The Commission shall, within six months of its appointment, deliver to the
governor a plan for responding to a public health emergency, that includes
provisions for the following . .
"(17) Other measures necessary to carry out the purposes
of this Act" [p. 35].
"Section 802. Rules and regulations. The public
health authority is authorized to promulgate and implement such rules and
regulations as are reasonable and necessary to implement and effectuate the
provisions of this Act. The public health authority shall have the power to
enforce the provisions of this Act through the imposition of fines and
penalties, the issuance of orders, and such or remedies as are provided by
law" [p. 36].
"Section 804. Liability . . Neither the State, its political
subdivisions, nor, except in cases of gross negligence or willful misconduct,
the governor, the health authority, or any other State official referenced in
this Act, is liable for the death of or any injury to persons, or damage to
property, as the result of complying with or attempting to comply with this Act,
or any rule or regulations promulgated pursuant to this Act. (b) Private
liability . . [refers to protection from liability for any individual, firm,
etc., who obeys State orders in such matters]" [pp.
37-38].
SMALLPOX AND RABIES FROM THE SKY
Unbelievable? Not at all. It is happening every day in
America, and terrorists are not doing it; we are! The U.S. government has been
infecting the woods with smallpox since 1990. Unbelievable?
Read on.
In the fall of 2000, a woman in northeastern Ohio came close
to dying with smallpox because the disease is falling out of the sky, mixed, of
all things, with rabies!
The woman was 28 years old and pregnant. While walking her
dog not far from her home, she found it trying to eat something. Rushing over,
she attempted to take it away from the dog; but, in the process, she cut one
finger and got an abrasion on her forearm.
Three days later, she developed two blisters on her arm,
which then developed into lesions. Six days after the bite, she went to a
physician who gave her an antibiotic. Two days later, amid increasing pain,
swelling and the formation of necrotic (dead) tissue, she went to the emergency
room. Admitted into the hospital, she was given intravenous medications. On the
third day, her condition worsened and the necrotic area increased in size. In
surgery, her wounds were drained, but little infectious material was there.
Two days later, after appearing to improve, she was released from the
hospital. But on the third day after that, she returned to the emergency room
with a generalized rash, burning sensations, facial tightness, and exfoliation.
Five days later, a thick layer of skin sloughed off the soles of her feet and
the palms of her hands.
Miraculously, the woman and her unborn child survived
(Charles Rupprecht, M.D., New England Journal of Medicine, August 23, 2001.
Rupprecht is on the staff of the CDC).
What could be the cause of this strange situation?
It turned out that the woman had tried to take away from her
dog "vaccine bait," which had been air-dropped by the U.S. government!
The bait contained the recombinant vaccinia/rabies glycoprotein, which is
an oral vaccine intended to control rabies in raccoons. Vaccinia is the
immunizing agent used in smallpox vaccines (ibid.).
So, by picking up that object near her home, the healthy
young lady had received the equivalent of a smallpox vaccination (of
"harmless" vaccinia) and almost died from it!
Oddly enough, according to the USDA’s Animal and Plant
Inspection Service, and the FDA, there has never been a reported human rabies or
smallpox death directly or indirectly from a raccoon (APHIS, Environmental
Documents, December 10, 2002)!
Yet the distribution of the oral wildlife vaccination for
raccoon rabies has been carried out in America since 1990. Tens of millions of
the recombinant vaccine bait have been dropped from airplanes or tossed by hand.
In the above Journal article, Dr. Rupprecht noted
that, in northeast Ohio alone, from spring 1997 to fall 2000, over 3.6
million baits were deployed over approximately 2,500 square miles. The baits
were dropped by planes flying over "uniform grid lines 0.3 miles
apart." The baits have been found in backyards, near homes, in parks, on
sidewalks and roads, and animal feedlots. Dogs have found them and brought them
home.
So you thought the terrorists might bring smallpox to
America; well, you did not know the half of it.
To make matters worse, the rabies part of that vaccine bait
is totally experimental! It has never been tested on humans, yet it is being
dropped near our homes.
This is the first oral rabies vaccine ever used in the United States. It is
also "the first release of a genetically modified organism in the
world" (Neil Sherman, interview with Charles Rupprecht, M.D. of the CDC,
"Wildlife Rabies Vaccine Infects Woman," HealthScoutNews, August 23,
2001).
At the same time, the World Health Organization states on
their website that widespread use of vaccinia as a human smallpox protection is
not recommended, due to potentially serious complications; and no governments
are currently giving or recommending it for routine use (World Health
Organization, "Frequently Asked Questions," October 6, 2001).
Vaccinia, the germs in the smallpox vaccine are dangerous;
that is why there is so much controversy over whether the vaccine should be
given to anyone (CDC, Smallpox Vaccine Recommendations of the Advisory Committee
on Immunization Practices (ACIP) Report dated June 22, 2001).
If you find any of these small biscuits, do not handle them; if you do, wash
your hands as soon as possible.
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