Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Before you VACCINEnate your BABY



Media bombarded us with the benefits of being vaccinated. But before you inject your child with this clear liquid substance, why wont you scrutinize its composition and ingredients first. All we see is a clear liquid in a syringe - but back in the laboratory a wide variety of complex processes are used to make it, many incorporating cells or body chemicals which originate from the animal kingdom.

Vaccine preparation is not that complex during 1770's. Sometime in 1796, Jenner took pus from the hand of a milkmaid with cowpox, inoculated an 8-year-old boy with it, and six weeks later variolated the boy's arm with smallpox, afterwards observing that the boy did not catch smallpox. Further experimentation demonstrated the efficacy of the procedure on an infant. Vaccination with cowpox  though still widely practiced in England, was banned in 1840. Louis Pasteur generalized Jenner's idea by developing what he called a rabies vaccine, and in the nineteenth century vaccines were considered a matter of national prestige, and compulsory vaccination laws were passed. 

Don't be mislead, this vaccination process conducted by Jenner is same thing as inoculation. Take note of the word inoculated and variolated. Inoculation is the transfer of microorganisms to a sterile medium for the purpose of initiating a culture. It is compose of purely microorganism.Variolation is the obsolete process of inoculating a susceptible person with material taken from a vesicle of a person who has smallpox. Both process is purely natural. NO chemicals, and NO preservatives involve.

The vaccination conducted by Jenner is very much different from what we are using today. The vaccine of the 21st Century is compose of Animal tissues, Thimerosal, Preservatives, Formaldehyde, and MSG that undergoes complex chemical processes. You read it right! You are injecting Animal Tissues, Mercury, Preservatives, Formalin, and Vetsin  to your newborn child. 

Do you see the trick now? The vaccine that we are using now is compose of  excipients not easily understood by a typical housewife. These vaccine ingredients aims to preserve the life of the vaccine. Not preserve the life of your child. Watch this video and read more for more info.


Vaccine Ingredients
aluminum hydroxide (directly linked to Alzheimer's Disease)
aluminum phosphate (directly linked to Alzheimer's Disease)
ammonium sulfate (an inorganic chemical compound used a fertilizer and "protein purifier"; known to cause kidney & liver damage, gastrointestinal dysfunctions)
animal tissues: pig blood, horse blood, rabbit brain, dog kidney, monkey kidney, chick embryo, chicken egg, duck egg, and calf (bovine) serum, fetal bovine serum VERO cells, a continuous line of monkey kidney cells, and washed sheep’s red blood cells. Those build foundation for neurological diseases)
formaldehyde (used as a preservative, embalming fluid, and disinfectant, known to cause cancer, chronic bronchitis, eye irritation and numerous other diseases)
formalin (used as a disinfectant or anti-bacterial, containing 37% formaldehyde)
monosodium glutamate (MSG; causes cancer in humans, also linked to obesity)
thimerosal (mercury; a neurotoxin linked to psychological, neurological & immunological problems. Nervous system damage, kidney disease, birth defects, dental problems, mood swings, mental changes, hallucinations, memory loss, nerve damage and inability to concentrate can occur. Symptoms also include tremors, loss of dermal sensitivity, slurred speech and, in rare cases, even death and paralysis. This additive alone was the catalyst for another recent Class Action Lawsuit organized by mothers of children born with Autism & the many related behavioral disorders associated with it. Autism is now occurring at levels never seen before in history, 1 in 67. The average used to be 1 in 20,000.)

Vaccine Production
Vaccine production has several stages. First, the antigen itself is generated. Viruses are grown either on primary cells such as chicken eggs (e.g., for influenza), or on continuous cell lines such as cultured human cells (e.g., for hepatitis A). Bacteria are grown in bioreactors (e.g.,Haemophilus influenzae type b). 

Alternatively, a recombinant protein derived from the viruses or bacteria can be generated in yeast, bacteria, or cell cultures. After the antigen is generated, it is isolated from the cells used to generate it. A virus may need to be inactivated, possibly with no further purification required. Recombinant proteins need many operations involving ultrafiltration and column chromatography. 

Finally, the vaccine is formulated by adding adjuvant, stabilizers, and preservatives as needed. The adjuvant enhances the immune response of the antigen, stabilizers increase the storage life, and preservatives allow the use of multidose vials. Combination vaccines are harder to develop and produce, because of potential incompatibilities and interactions among the antigens and other ingredients involved.

Once sufficient numbers of the virus have been replicated, the manufacturers use complex filtration and purification processes to try to remove everything but the viruses from the vaccine.Dr Scopes said: "The quality control mechanisms are amazing. Basically it is a bad idea to have anything but the virus itself in the vaccine.

Effectiveness
Vaccines do not guarantee complete protection from a disease. Sometimes, this is because the host's immune system simply does not respond adequately or at all. This may be due to a lowered immunity in general (diabetes, steroid use, HIV infection, age) or because the host's immune system does not have a B cell capable of generating antibodies to that antigen.

Even if the host develops antibodies, the human immune system is not perfect and in any case the immune system might still not be able to defeat the infection immediately. In this case, the infection will be less severe and heal faster.

Adjuvants are typically used to boost immune response. Most often aluminium adjuvants are used, but adjuvants like squalene are also used in some vaccines and more vaccines with squalene and phosphate adjuvants are being tested. Larger doses are used in some cases for older people (50–75 years and up), whose immune response to a given vaccine is not as strong.

The efficacy or performance of the vaccine is dependent on a number of factors:
the disease itself (for some diseases vaccination performs better than for other diseases)
the strain of vaccine (some vaccinations are for different strains of the disease)
whether one kept to the timetable for the vaccinations (see Vaccination schedule)
some individuals are "non-responders" to certain vaccines, meaning that they do not generate antibodies even after being vaccinated correctly other factors such as ethnicity, age, or genetic predisposition.

References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine
http://www.news-medical.net/health/Vaccine-Excipients.aspx
http://www.vaclib.org/email/makevacs.htm
Acceptance of Responsibility for H1N1 Flu Vaccine Consequences pdf by Aajonus Vonderplanitz







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