FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW
Anthrax. Anthrax is a highly infectious disease caused by spores
from a bacterium known as Bacillus anthracis. These spores resist
destruction; can lie dormant for centuries; and may be present in the soil
for decades, infecting grazing animals (primarily goats, sheep, and
cattle) that ingest the spores.
Third-world countries, especially agricultural-based economies,
continue to report cases of human anthrax. But it occurs far less
frequently in advanced nations (at the present time, about 130 cases per
year in the U.S.).
How contracted. You cannot catch anthrax from humans. Infection can
only occur from three sources of exposure:
The first is skin contact with live infected animals or with the hide,
hair, or bones of an infected animal. This can cause cutaneous (skin)
anthrax infection, which is the most common type, accounting for more than
95% of cases. About 20% of untreated cases are fatal.
The second is eating undercooked or raw infected meat. This can cause
gastrointestinal anthrax infection, which kills about 20% to 60% of those
not immediately treated.
The third is breathing in airborne spores. This may lead to pulmonary
(or inhalation) anthrax. This form has a high mortality rate of 80% to 90%
or higher. Those who are infected generally die within a few days.
Three stages of infection. The first phase of the infection occurs
for up to five days after inhalation of the spores. The patient has
flu-like symptoms, such as cough, fatigue, and mild fever.
During the second stage, conditions improve as the body tries to fight
the disease. But quite rapidly, the third stage begins, and a severe
respiratory infection occurs. Fever, usually accompanied by chest pain
occurs, and there is fluid in the lungs. Within a day, septic shock and
death generally occur.
Antibiotics are the primary method of treatment, but only useful if
given immediately after exposure.
Symptoms. Here is a more complete description of symptoms, not all
of which will be experienced by the same victim of the vaccine:
The early symptoms include headaches, malaise, respiratory distress,
chills, diarrhea (sometimes bloody), fever, and abdominal cramping.
Symptoms often worsen after the third or fourth shot (of the six). Later
chronic symptoms include dizziness, chronic fatigue, chest pains, sleep
disorders, memory loss, headaches, joint and muscle pain, peripheral
sensory neuropathies, intermittent diarrhea, abdominal pain, and recurring
rashes. Other known symptoms include blackouts, autoimmune diseases,
swelling of the limbs, nausea, night sweats, muscle and joint pain,
ringing in the ears, cysts, tunnel vision, seizures, and fatigue.
Nearly fifty different reactions have been reported from the shot.
An untested vaccine. The original anthrax vaccine used in the U.S.
was later modified and the manufacturing process was changed. But a patent
was later issued to the U.S. army on a vaccine (called an anthrax
"antigen") using a still different process. The army applied for
a license for this vaccine in 1967. But the original study of this antigen
vaccine was never documented, nor were the results published. It is
believed that the army wanted them kept secret. Yet it was the vaccine for
which the license was granted (Thomas L. Rempfer and Russ Dingle,
"Information Paper for American's Policymakers," W. Suffield,
CT, October 26, 1999, p. 7).
Thus the current anthrax vaccine has never had proper testing and was
never properly licensed as considered safe and effective by the FDA. The
only legitimate license was granted for the original vaccine, before it
was changed. The Defense Department, in its paperwork, does not
acknowledge the existence of this second unlicensed vaccine yet it was the
one given to servicemen in the Gulf War and from the later 1990s onward.
This provides an interesting background to the anthrax vaccine crisis we
live with today.
Officially "undefined." The vaccine has three parts: the
protective antigen, edema factor, and lethal factor. Safe vaccines balance
the three. But this vaccine is termed "undefined" by both
civilian and military medical experts, and the ingredients vary from lot
to lot, affecting potency and safety.
The best record of how safe it is. In this brief account, we will
primarily look at how the U.S. military is making use of the anthrax
vaccine, its effects, and the cover-up associated with it. This is because
the Pentagon has used it extensively on U.S. troops, whereas it has not
been given to many civilians. Learning what happened to our troops, we can
know whether we will later want such an injection ourselves.
Pentagon denial. The Defense Department denies any connection
between anthrax and the Gulf War Syndrome, just as it denied the existence
of that Gulf War illness for at least the first five years after that war.
More than 130 studies have been funded by the Defense Department, to
investigate the causes of the Gulf War Syndrome; yet not one has looked
specifically at the anthrax vaccine -although 16 other causes have been
considered.
British study. But one study done by the British government showed
a high correlation of the syndrome in those who received the British
anthrax vaccine (C.E. Fulco, "Health of UK Servicemen Who Served in
the Persian Gulf War," The Lancet, January 16, 1999, p. 169).
Further checking refused. The closest we ever got to investigating
the relationship were several high-level briefings, which concluded that
there was no connection; and recommendation was made against further
research into any U.S. correlation of anthrax vaccine to the Gulf War
Syndrome.
Second vaccine entirely different. After the vaccine had been used
for years on Americans, at a General Accounting Office (GAO) hearing in
1999, Kwai Chan testified that "these two vaccines, the original and
the newly licensed one of the '70s, were made using different processes
and have different data to support their safety. While these studies
identified varying rates of adverse reactions, they did not question the
safety of the vaccine" (Kwai Chan, testifying before the House
Government Reform Committee, May 7, 1999). In spite of varying amounts of
response and infection in the second version, which had never been tested,
our military did no investigations.
Inadequate data. Another interesting statement was made nearly a
year later: "In the peer-reviewed literature there is
inadequate/insufficient evidence to determine whether an association does
or does not exist between anthrax vaccination and long-term adverse health
outcomes" (Conclusion of the National Academy of Sciences' Institute
of Medicine Committee on Health Effects Associated with Exposures during
the Gulf War, March 30, 2000).
Those are big words, for "We don't know and have never tried to
find out."
Two shocking studies. Although the Defense Department, itself,
never did any studies on the vaccine, there is some other data on the
vaccination results (from a Statement by Kwai Chan, hearing before the
Subcomittee on National Security, Veterans Affairs and International
Relations, Committee on Government Reform, U.S. House of Representatives,
May 7, 1999, p. 2):
A 1997 Pittman study focused on 508 doses given. They revealed high
local reactions of 21 % (with 5% moderate or severe), plus high amounts of
systemic reactions: 29% mild and 14% moderate or severe.
The CDC reported on 4,000 doses given. Local reactions were up to
30%, with 10% moderate or severe.
A Korean study. Using the same vaccine, a Korean study of 337
troops showed reaction rates of minor to severe of 40% for men and 70% for
women. For a lengthy period of time afterward, 3% of the men and 8% of the
women had a reduced work rate (Redmond Handy, 'Analysis of DOD's Anthrax
Vaccine Immunization Program (AVIP]," report submitted to Call for
Amnesty Press Conference, Washington, D.C., February 12, 2001, p. 2). A
Fort Bragg study revealed a 44% reaction rate.
75% reaction rate. Testifying before Congress, data was given that
one Air National Guard squadron reported a 75% systemic rate of reactions
from the anthrax vaccine. Many were too weak to work. These are men and
women who formerly were in the best possible physical health. Some took
more than eight weeks to get a diagnosis and treatment.
50% reduction. Dr. Renata Engler, chief of the allergy-immunology
department at Walter Reed Hospital, said that, of those vaccinated at
Dover Air Force Base, 25 service members reported Gulf War illness-like
symptoms, resulting in a 50% reduction in function.
Such high rates of reaction are astounding, in view of the fact that
the Pentagon is determined to vaccinate 2.4 million military personnel.
2.4 million before 2005. The Pentagon is determined to inject all
2.4 million service people with anthrax before 2005, without arousing the
opposition of the American public.
The notorious VAERS form. VAERS are Vaccine Adverse Event Report
System forms. One is to be filled out each time a service person has a bad
reaction from a vaccine. But it is known that frequently the military
either does not fill them out or discards them afterward. They do not want
evidence of injury from the anthrax vaccine.
Instead of protecting service personnel from injury from the vaccine,
the Pentagon appears anxious to protect itself and to protect the firm
which makes the dangerous vaccine.
Indemnification. In September 1998, Secretary of the Army Louis
Caldera, on behalf of the Defense Department, granted indemnification from
legal liability to BioPort, the Michigan firm making the anthrax vaccine.
Protecting the firm. An earlier protection was signed in 1992, on a
Secretary of the Army letterhead, for the preceding owner of that plant.
Here is part of that letter:
"The obligation assumed by MBPI under this contract involves
unusually hazardous risks associated with the potential for adverse
reactions in some recipients and the possibility that the desired
immunological effect will not be obtained by all recipients. There is no
way to be certain that the pathogen used in tests measuring vaccine
efficacy will be sufficient, or similar to the pathogen that U.S. forces
might encounter to confer immunity."-Redmond Handy, 'Analysis of
DOD's Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program [A VIP], " report to Call
for Amnesty Press Conference, Washington, D.C., February 12, 2001, p. 12.
The truth about BioPort. Because a significant part of the problem
is the sloppy manner in which BioPort manufactures the vaccine, here is a
little history:
In September 1998, BioPort purchased the anthrax vaccine manufacturing
facility from the State of Michigan for $24 million (Keith J. Costa,
"Audit Paints 'Bleak Picture' of Anthrax Vaccine Maker's
Viability,"
Inside the Pentagon, April 13, 2000, p. 14). Less than two weeks later,
BioPort was awarded a $45 million sole source contract to supply anthrax
vaccine to the Pentagon.
Major Glenn MacDonald, USAR (retired), in his book, Greed and Guinea
Pigs: Risking the Health of the U.S. Military, revealed the background of
this mess.
Also see David Oppliger, statement to House Majority Counsel to
Democratic members of the House Oversight and Ethics Committee, September
23, 1998.
Conflict of Interest. Two former directors at that Michigan plant
(Robert Myers and Robert van Ravenswaay) wanted to purchase the facility,
for they knew that major profits would accrue when the government signed
new contracts for the anthrax vaccine. But when Michigan State
Representative Lingg Brewer called it a conflict of interest, Myers stated
in the Lansing State Journal (November 30, 1996) that he was not involved
in buying the plant. He wrote: "I am a state employee . . this would
be a conflict of interest." The problem here was that, as the plant
director, he knew of the $130 million contract with the Pentagon as early
as October 2, 1996, before the purchase. This knowledge placed -Myers and
Ravenswaay in ai unf5frly advantageous position.
Then, in January 1997, before the purchase, Myers and Ravenswaay filed
a for-profit corporation under the name MBPI, with 60,000 shares of stock.
One week later, sale of the plant was authorized. On June 10, the MBPI
increased its shares to 1 million. In one letter, Myers confirmed that he
knew in advance of the confidential bids for the plant. The pair also
solicited financing from at least one other bidder, which was a violation
of nondisclosure requirements.
Myers and Ravenswaay later joined the board of BloPort, which was the
top bidder; and Myers became its chief scientific officer. The purchase
was announced on June 2, 1998. Both before and after the purchase, Myers
had not maintained proper quality controls at the plant; nor did he do so
afterward.
Fuad El-Hibri enters. This same year, MBPI was resold to Fhad El-Hibri,
a man of Near Eastern (Lebanese) descent, who became a U.S. citizen a
month after the purchase. He called the firm BioPort. About three weeks
after the purchase, BioPort received a $29 million exclusive contract with
the Department of Defense to manufacture, test, bottle, and store the
anthrax vaccine. Over the next five years, BioPort was expected to produce
$60 million worth of anthrax vaccine. By August 2001, the Pentagon had
given BioPort $126 million.
An admiral joins. There had been bidders lower than BioPort; but former
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral William Crowe, who only
recently had retired, had been quickly placed on El-Hibri's BioPort board
of directors. He immediately helped make sure that BioPort got the plant.
Some believe Crowe had been rewarded for publicly defending Clinton in
his first presidential bid. At a time when few others would do so, Crowe
stood before the TV cameras and declared Clinton to be a good man. Later
still, Crowe was appointed ambassador to Britain, another high-paying job.
Where the money is spent. Records show that BioPort has since spent
millions on sidelines (such as $23,000 on the chief executive officer's
furniture and $1.28 million in management bonuses for its executives)
while still not improving the quality of the vaccines. To this day,
BioPort continues to fail FDA inspections.
So much for the place where the vaccine is not properly made; what
happens to the people who take it?
Personal experiences. Thomas Heemstra, in his book, Anthrax: A Deadly
Shot in the Dark, described several incidents that he personally knew of
in the U.S. Air Force. Heemstra was an F- 16 Fighter Squadron Commander
and had a successful military career spanning 20 years, with over 3,000
flying hours and 15 combat missions in the Middle East before he was
forced out of the military for refusing to take the anthrax vaccine.
Here are a few of many incidents he describes. Americans are frightened
of anthrax and smallpox terrorism; we need to become afraid of the
vaccines against them!
Nine of Twelve. "In Battle Creek, Michigan, nine of twelve
personnel from a small unit preparing to deploy to the Middle East were
given the shot and became sick. Three of those were seriously ill. They
were harassed and the officers made an example of them. They were called
malcontents and poor workers, even though they had excellent work records.
Worse, they could not get the medical treatment they needed and deserved.
Their symptoms were similar and very troubling for any fighter pilot;
these included memory loss, chills, fatigue, muscle aches, and
dizziness." Heemstra, p. 38.
Aged 20 years. "Within six weeks of his fifth shot, Master
Sergeant Clearence McNamer of Vacaville, California, experienced severe
symptoms. He wrote to the Air Force Times, 'I began to experience severe
insomnia, headaches, twitches in my right arm, involuntary tremors and
complete loss of scalp hair, eyebrows, and facial hair . . eyesight
worsened, hot and cold flashes, exhausted all the time, chest pains,
shortness of breath, and moments of memory loss. [ I ] feel and look like
I've aged 20 years. Some of the symptoms have subsided, but I am concerned
about the long-term effects.-With most people, the vaccine has its worst
effects after the third or fourth shot.
Can barely walk. "Laurie spoke to reporters for her father,
Air Force Reservist Earl Stover, because his symptoms are so severe and
limiting. He has health problems every day from ringing ears to chronic
fatigue to memory loss. Previously a very strong man who hung drywall,
[now] barely able to walk or keep his balance.
After two shots. "Jason Nietupski, an Army reservist, was
diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder case by the first shot and became
markedly worse after the next two. His symptoms ranged from sores all over
his mouth to blood clots in his legs, which make him unable to stand for
long periods. Not only does he suffer from chronic fatigue syndrome, but
he has been diagnosed with an allergic reaction called Stephen Johnson
Syndrome. His medical records are six to eight inches thick, from his own
description.
Totally ruined. "Thomas J. Colisimo of Pennsylvania, once an
amateur weight-lifting competitor, now gets winded pulling his wheelchair
out of his pickup truck. He had the typical, fairly serious symptoms from
the first two shots. The third resulted in nine cysts on his scalp that
had to be surgically removed, one the size of a half-dollar. Still, he
didn't associate these symptoms with the shot until his fourth one in
September 1999. From this, he lost 50 pounds and began unexpectedly
passing out. Three months later, he was suffering from fatigue, tunnel
vision, and the first of his blackouts which lasted 30 to 45 minutes. He
suffers from low-blood pressure, memory loss, depression, explosive and
unexpected loss of bowel control, and cognitive difficulties. Sleep apnea
causes him to stop breathing in his sleep up to 60 times per hour.
"Military doctors told him that the cysts were probably from a
milk allergy, that everything else was psychosomatic, and that he was
starving himself. They would not allow him to see his own medical records,
saying they were confidential. He was told that his symptoms were not
anthrax-related and that he had to take the fifth shot, which he
refused." Heemstra, pp. 39-40.
Only the most capable men and women, in the very best physical
condition, are selected to fly fighter planes. Yet after a few injections
of an extremely small amount of fluid, many have been ruined for life.
Really protective? Here is what two medical experts say about that
part of the anthrax vaccine, called the "protective antigen,"
which is supposed to keep you from getting anthrax:
"No direct determination of the content or structure of the
protective antigen in the vaccine have been made, and it is unknown
whether the protective antigen is biologically active." Dr. Philip
Brachman and Colonel Arthur Friedlander, M.D., Anthrax, in S.A. Plotkin
and E.A. Mortimer, Jr. (eds), Vaccines, p. 739. [Friedlander was chief of
bacteriology at Fort Detrick, our military headquartersfor biological
warfare research.]
Why then is this dangerous liquid being injected into American
citizens? If only one person is protected from taking any of the dangerous
shots described in my book, The Vaccination Crisis, it will be worth the
work it took to write it.
Comparing medical claims. After the Vietnam War, 9.6% of the
veterans filed medical claims due to the war The Korean War was 5% and
World War II was 6.6%. As of March 1, 2001, 36% of the Gulf War veterans
have filed claims! Yet that was from a war that only lasted a little over
four days!
Astounding facts. Of the 700,000 military sent to the Gulf, 263,000
sought VA (Veterans Administration) medical care and 185,780 filed claims.
Of the 171,878 claims processed, 149,094 were approved. Already, more than
9,600 Gulf War veterans have died! Yet nearly all of them were in their
twenties in 1990.
During that war, more than 14,000 chemical-agent detection devices
sounded repeatedly, yet they were all discounted as false alarms.
It is of interest that, of the service personnel who did not go to the
Gulf but still received the anthrax vaccine, 12% developed Gulf War
Syndrome.
It should be mentioned that the highest rate of physical problems (42%)
was experienced by those troops who were in Kuwait or Iraq, for they were
exposed to additional contamination. Here is a summary from a special,
detailed report in a large natural remedies book:
"Pesticide collars and sprays, nerve-gas inhalation, swallowing
anti-nerve gas (PB) tablets, Mycoplasma infection from the nerve gas,
anthrax vaccines, breathing smoke from burning oil wells, and drinking
`diet ('sugarless') soft drinks heated above 86 F"-Vance Ferrell,
Natural Remedies Encyclopedia, 3rd Ed., p. 487.
More vaccines ahead! In all that you have read in this chapter, you
should be made aware of the fact that the anthrax vaccine is only the
start.
Forty more vaccines! The Joint Vaccination Acquisition Program (JVAP)
is a $322 million, ten-year program for the development, production,
testing, and storage of vaccines. A wide range (as many as forty) of
vaccines are being developed to "protect" U.S. armed forces
against potential biological warfare agents (William F Jasper,
"Vexing Vaccine," New American, November 20, 2000, p. 10).
The Pentagon plan, that it must maintain exclusive control of all
aspects of these new vaccines, is deeply flawed. It will be in a position
to hide negative data, just as it has with the anthrax vaccine. Military
leaders were trained to fight wars, command men, and get the job done.
They were not taught to be careful of the lives of service personnel.
"As the JVAP moves forward, DOD [Department of Defense; i.e., the
Pentagon] will fund and control all steps in the vaccine process, from
initial research and development to manufacturing and administering the
vaccines. If history is a guide, assessment of efficacy and safety,
stringent manufacturing controls, and normal FDA oversight may be
compromised. If the vaccines are licensed as proposed, no informed consent
need be obtained and vaccinations will probably be mandatory. The Defense
Department is assuming greater authority over the medical interventions
given to troops, at the same time that it has failed to follow agreed upon
procedures for the use of experimental drugs and vaccines." Meryl
Nass, M.D., `Anthrax Vaccine: A Model Response to the Threat of Biological
Warfare, " paper dated July 19, 1998, p. 14.