Are New Vaccines Laced With Birth-Control Drugs?
By J.A. Miller, correspondent for Human Life International.
Originally published in HLI Reports, Human Life
International, Gaithersburg, Maryland; June/July 1995, Volume 13, Number 8
During the early 1990s, the World Health Organization (WHO) has been overseeing massive vaccination campaigns against tetanus in a number of countries, among them Nicaragua, Mexico, and the Philippines. In October 1994, HLI received a communication from its Mexican affiliate, the Comite' Pro Vida de Mexico, regarding that country's anti-tetanus campaign.
Suspicious of the campaign protocols, the Comite' obtained several vials of the vaccine and had them analyzed by chemists.
Some of the vials were found to contain human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), a naturally occurring hormone essential for maintaining a pregnancy.
hCG and Anti-hCG Antibodies
In nature the hCG hormone alerts the woman's body that she is
pregnant and causes the release of other hormones to prepare the uterine lining
for the implantation of the fertilized egg. The rapid rise in hCG levels after
conception makes it an excellent marker for confirmation of pregnancy: when a
woman takes a pregnancy test she is not tested for the pregnancy itself, but for
the elevated presence of hCG.
However, when introduced into the body coupled with a tetanus toxoid carrier, antibodies will be formed not only against tetanus but also against hCG. In this case the body fails to recognize hCG as a friend and will produce anti-hCG antibodies.
The antibodies will attack subsequent pregnancies by killing the hCG which naturally sustains a pregnancy; when a woman has sufficient anti-hCG antibodies in her system, she is rendered incapable of maintaining a pregnancy.(1)
HLI reported the sketchy facts regarding the Mexican tetanus vaccines to its World Council members and affiliates in more than 60 countries.(2) Soon additional reports of vaccines laced with hCG hormones began to drift in from the Philippines, where more than 3.4 million women were recently vaccinated. Similar reports came from Nicaragua, which had conducted its own vaccination campaign in 1993.
The Known Facts
Here are the known facts concerning the tetanus vaccination
campaigns in Mexico and the Philippines:
* Only women are vaccinated, and only the women between the ages of 15 and 45.
(In Nicaragua the age range was 12-49.)
But aren't men at least as likely as young women to come into contact with
tetanus? And what of the children? Why are they excluded?
* Human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) hormone has been found in the vaccines.
It does not belong there -- in the parlance of the O.J. Simpson murder trial,
the vaccine has been "contaminated."
* The vaccination protocols call for multiple injections -- three within three
months and a total of five altogether. But, since tetanus vaccinations provide
protection for ten years or more, why are multiple inoculations called for?(3)
* WHO has been actively involved for more than 20 years in the development of
an anti-fertility vaccine utilizing hCG tied to tetanus toxoid as a carrier --
the exact same coupling as has been found in the Mexican-Philippine-Nicaragua
vaccines.(4)
The Anti-Fertility Gang
Allied with the WHO in the development of an anti-fertility vaccine
(AFV) using hCG with tetanus and other carriers have been UNFPA, the UN
Development Programme (UNDP, the World Bank, the Population Council, the
Rockefeller Foundation, the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, and a
number of universities, including Uppsala, Helsinki, and Ohio State.(5) The U.S.
National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (part of NIH) was the
supplier of the hCG hormone in some of the AFV experiments.(6)
The WHO begain its "Special Programme" in human reproduction in 1972, and by 1993 had spent more than $356 million on "reproductive health" research.(7) It is this "Programme" which has pioneered the development of the abortificant vaccine.
Over $90 million of this Programme's funds were contributed by Sweden; Great Britain donated more than $52 million, while Norway, Denmark and Germany kicked in for $41 million , $27 million, and $12 million, respectively. The U.S., thanks to the cut-off of such funding during the Reagan-Bush administrations, has contributed "only" $5.7 million, including a new payment in 1993 by the Clinton administration of $2.5 million. Other major contibutors to the WHO Programme include UNFPA, $61 million; the World Bank, $15.5 million; the Rockefeller Foundation, $2.5 million; the Ford Foundation, over $1 million; and the IDRC (International Research and Development Centre of Canada), $716.5 thousand.
WHO and Philippine Health Department Excuses
When the first reports surfaced in the Philippines of tetanus toxoid
vaccine being laced with hCG hormones, the WHO and the Philippine Department of
Health (DOH) immediately denied that the vaccine contained hCG. Confronted with
the results of laboratory tests which detected its presence in three of the four
vials of tetanus toxoid examined, the WHO and DOH scoffed at the evidence coming
from "right-to-life and Catholic" sources. Four new vials of the tetanus vaccine
were submitted by DOH to St. Luke's (Lutheran) Medical Center in Manila -- and
all four vials tested positive for hCG!
From outright denial the stories now shifted to the allegedly "insignificant" quantity of the hCG present; the volume of hCG present is insufficient to produce anti-hCG antibodies.
But new tests designed to detect the presence of hCG antibodies in the blood sera of women vaccinated with the tetauns toxoid vaccine were undertaken by Philippine pro-life and Catholic groups. Of thirty women tested subsequent to receiving tetanus toxoid vaccine, twenty-six tested positive for high levels of anti-hCG! If there were no hCG in the vaccine, or if it were present in only "insignificant" quantities, why were the vaccinated women found to be harboring anti-hCG antibodies? The WHO and the DOH had no answers.
New arguments surfaced: hCG's apparent presence in the vaccine was due to "false positives" resulting from the particular substances mixed in the vaccine or in the chemicals testing for hCG. And even if hCG was really there, its presence derived from the manufacturing process.
But the finding of hCG antibodies in the blood sera of vaccinated women obviated the need to get bogged down in such debates. It was no longer necessary to argue about what may or may not have been the cause of the hCG presence, when one now had the effect of the hCG. There is no known way for the vaccinated women to have hCG antibodies in their blood unless hCG had been artificially introduced into their bodies!
Why A Tetanus Toxoid "Carrier"?
Because the human body does not attack its own naturally occurring
hormone hCG, the body has to be fooled into treating hCG as an invading enemy in
order to develop a successful anti-fertility vaccine utilizing hCG antibodies. A
paper delivered at the 4th International Congress of Reproductive Immunology
(Kiel, West Germany, 26-29 July 1989) spelled it out: "Linkage to a carrier was
done to overcome the immunological tolerance to hCG."(8)
Vaccine Untested by Drug Bureau
After the vaccine controversy had reached a fever pitch, a new
bombshell exploded; none of the three different brands of tetanus vaccine being
used had ever been licensed for sale and distribution or registered with the
Philippine Bureau of Food and Drugs (BFAD), as required by law. The head of the
BFAD lamely explained that the companies distributing these brands "did not
apply for registration."(9) The companies in question are Connaught Laboratories
Ltd. and Intervex, both from Canada, and CSL Laboratories from Australia.
It seemed that the BFAD might belatedly require re-testing, but the idea was
quickly rejected when the Secretary of Health declared that, since the vaccines
had been certified by the WHO -- there they are again! -- there was assurance
enough that the "vaccines come from reputable manufacturers."(10)
Just how "reputable" one of the manufacturers might be is open to some question. In the mid-`80s Connaught Laboratories was found to be knowingly distributing vials of AIDS-contaminated blood products.(11)
Epilogue
At this juncture, evidence is beginning to appear from Africa.(12)
HLI has called for a Congressional investigation of the situation, inasmuch as
nearly every agency involved in the development of an anti-fertility vaccine is
funded, at least in part, with U.S. monies.
NOTES:
(1) "Abortifacient vaccines loom as new threat," HLI Reports, November 1993,
pp. 1-2.
(2) World Council Reports, 28 November 1994, pp. 4-5.
(3) A call placed by this writer on 5 May 1995 to the Montgomery County
(Maryland) Health Department, Epidemology Division -- Infectious Diseases --
Adult Immunizations, elicited the following information:
Q. For how long a time does the tetanus vaccination offer protection?
A. 10 years.
Q. Have you ever heard of any adult requiring three tetanus vaccinations
within a 3 or 4 month time period, and a
total of 5 vaccinations in all within a year or so?
A. Whaaaat! Never. No way!
Reports from the Philippines appear to confirm the 10-year immunity afforded by tetanus toxoid vaccinations: prior to the campaigns begun in 1993, the so-called booster shots were given only every 10 years.
(4) More than a score of articles, many written by WHO researchers, document
WHO's attempts to create an anti-fertility vaccine utilizing tetanus toxoid as a
carrier. Some leading articles include:
"Clinical profile and Toxicology Studies on Four Women Immunized with
Pr-B-hCG-TT," Contraception,
February, 1976, pp. 253-268.
"Observations on the antigenicity and clinical effects of a candidate
antipregnancy vaccine: B-subunit of human
chorionic gonadotropin linked to tetanus toxoid," Fertility and Sterility,
October 1980, pp. 328-335.
"Phase 1 Clinical Trials of a World Health Organisation Birth Control
Vaccine," The Lancet, 11 June 1988, pp.
1295-1298. "Vaccines for Fertility Regulation," Chapter 11, pp. 177-198,
Research in Human Reproduction, Biennial Report (1986-1987), WHO Special
Programme of Research, Development and Research Training in Human Reproduction
(WHO, Geneva 1988).
"Anti-hCG Vaccines are in Clinical Trials," Scandinavian Journal of
Immunology, Vol. 36, 1992, pp. 123-126.
(5) These institutional names are garnered from the journal articles cited in
the previous footnote.
(6) Lancet, 11 June 1988, p. 1296.
(7) Challenges in Reproductive Health Research, Biennial Report 1992-1993,
World Health Organization, Geneva, 1994, p. 186.
(8) G.P. Talwar, et al, "Prospects of an anti-hCG vaccine inducing antibodies
of high affinity...(etc)," Reproductive Technology 1989, Elsevier Science
Publishers, 1990, Amsterdam, New York, p. 231.
(9) "3 DOH vaccines untested by BFAD," The Philippine Star, 4 April 1995, pp.
1, 12.
(10) "BFAD junks re-testing of controversial shot," Manila Standard, 7 April
1995; "DOH: Toxoid vaccines are safe," The Philippine Star, 7 April 1995.
(11) "Ottawa got blood tainted by HIV." Ottawa Citizen, 4 April 1995.
(12) A nearly two-year old communique from Tanzania tells a familiar story:
tetanus toxoid vaccinations, five in all, given only to women aged 15-45.
Nigeria, too, may have been victimized; see The Lancet, 4 June 1988, p. 1273.
Credit: Article by J.A. Miller, special correspondent for Human Life International. Copyright June/July 1995 by Human Life International. This article was originally published in HLI Reports, Human Life International, Gaithersburg, Maryland; June/July 1995, Volume 13, Number 8. Permission to reprint granted to New Atlantean News.
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