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Vaccines – how safe are they?

Do You Know the following…..


- Not one of these ingredients in vaccines have ever been proven safe to inject
into humans, either individually or in combination with each other.

- The top vaccine experts in the WHO have recently admitted that the Safety
Science has not been done and that safety monitoring systems do not exist.
(video)1

- Vaccines are biological medicines designed to alter the immune system. Like
pharmaceutical medicines, they carry risks to health, including serious injury and
death.

- Some vaccines contain human DNA which comes from aborted foetal cell tissues
used in the manufacturing process. For these cells to be viable they were taken
from live aborted babies without anaesthesia. 2

- Other vaccines contain DNA taken from monkeys, dogs, chickens, cows and insects,
along with viruses and bacteria contained within those animal cells.

- Vaccines also contain other toxins such as Aluminium (a known neurotoxin),


formaldehyde, polysorbate 80 and monosodium glutamate.3

- Children in Ireland now receive 32 doses of vaccines containing 13 antigens by


13 months of age. The Irish Childhood Vaccine Schedule has been implemented
without any safety testing of the individual, synergistic or cumulative effect of
vaccines.

- Infant exposure to chemicals and toxins is acknowledged to play a role in immune


disease in child/adult life.

- 19 countries have established no-fault compensation systems for injuries and death
caused by vaccines.4 Ireland does not have one. The Vaccine Injury Compensation
Programme (VICP) in the US has paid out over $4 Billion in compensation from its
conception in 1986. The NVICP was introduced when vaccine manufacturers
asked the government to indemnify them from any injury caused by their
product.

- A study found 83 cases of acknowledged vaccine-induced brain damage that


include autism, a disorder that affects speech, social communication and
behaviour, that had been compensated by VICP.5

- According to recent Harvard Medical School research as little as 1% of vaccine


injuries are reported to health authorities.
- No vaccine has been tested for its carcinogen or mutagenic abilities.6

- Asthma, eczema, food allergies, arthritis, autism, cancer, diabetes mellitus,


miscarriages, SIDS, acid reflux, ear infections, seizures and epilepsy, febrile
convulsions, severe allergic reactions, anaphylaxis, ear infections, kidney failure,
arthritis, bleeding disorders, sepsis, heart attacks, fainting, and sudden death are
all listed as side effects of vaccines.

- Every vaccine comes with a manufacturer’s Package Leaflet containing


information for the user. This insert says to ‘read all of this leaflet carefully
before you or your child is vaccinated because it contains important
information for you’. Doctors do not give this insert to parents before they decide
to vaccinate their children. The HSE leaflet is given instead of the manufacturer’s
own product information. It is not a true representation of the manufacturer’s
information. For example, the package insert on the Irish MMR vaccine M-M-R
VaxPro lists the following as some of the potential side effects: aseptic meningitis;
swollen testicles; infection of the middle ear; inflamed salivary glands; atypical
measles; severe allergic reaction; seizures with or without fever; illnesses
involving inflammation of the nervous system (brain and/or spinal cord); Guillain-
Barré syndrome; deafness; Stevens-Johnson syndrome; joint pain and/or swelling.7

- According to research carried out by the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) a pregnant woman is 7 times more likely to miscarry if given the flu vaccine
during the first trimester 8

- Vaccine intervention is lowering levels of passive immunity among children of


mothers who have received vaccines.9

- Herd immunity is a theory based on ‘observations’ and ‘mathematical


formulations’ proposed, but never proven, over 50 years ago that has become a
cornerstone of epidemiologic theory.10

- Cases are being reported worldwide and with the predominant measles virus
genotype circulating the globe currently being B3 which appears to be more
transmissible than others. Current MMR vaccines have difficulty neutralising B3.
This means that while the vaccine is targeting certain strains others are replacing
them. The ‘outbreaks’ of measles are from these replacement strains and vaccine
failure.11

- The Irish Government has NOT commissioned a single independent safety study on
any of the vaccines on the Irish childhood schedule nor on any of the ingredients in
those vaccines?

- The Irish government is not giving parents the package inserts from the
manufacturers. Therefore, people cannot make informed choices.
Why are the Irish government and doctors not doing their due diligence
and researching vaccine safety for themselves? On what are they basing
their statement that ‘vaccines are safe’?
1 WHO scientists question safety of vaccines https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2IujhTdCLE

2 Thicke JC, Duncan D, et al. Cultivation of Poliomyelitis Virus in Tissue Culture; Growth of the Lansing
Strain in Human Embryonic Tissue. Canadian Journal of Medical Science Vol. 30, pg 231-245.
Weller TH, Enders JF, et al. Studies on the Cultivation of Poliomyelitis Viruses in Tissue Culture : I. The
Propagation of Poliomyelitis Viruses in Suspended Cell Cultures of Various Human Tissue Journal of
Immunology 1952;69;645-671
Croce P, MD, Vivisection or Science – a choice to make, Fetal Experimentation-Over the top Part 1, p.
99-108.CIVIS, 1991, Hans Ruesch Foundation
Leiva R, MD, A brief history of human diploid cell strains, NCBC Quarterly; Autumn 2006, pp 449-450
Father Paul Marx, OSB, Confessions of a Pro-Life Missionary, Human Life International, Front Royal, VA

3 Gherardi, R.K., Aouizerate, J., Cadusseau, J., et al. (2016). ‘Aluminium adjuvants of vaccines injected
into the muscle: normal fate, pathology and associated disease’, Morphologie, 100 (329), pp. 85-94

4 Looker, C., Kelly, H., (2011). ‘No-fault compensation following adverse events attributed to vaccination: a
review of international programmes’, Bulletin of the World Health Organization 89, pp. 371-378 https://
www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/89/5/10-081901/en/

5Holland, M.S., Conte, L., Krakow, R., Colin, L., (2011). ‘Unanswered Questions from the Vaccine Injury
Compensation Program: A Review of Compensated Cases of Vaccine-Induced Brain Injury’, Pace
Environmental Law (PELR) Review, 28 (2) Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1844614

6 See top of page 6 of MMR vaccine insert by way of example https://www.merck.com/product/usa/


pi_circulars/m/mmr_ii/mmr_ii_pi.pdf

7https://vactruth.com/vaccine-inserts-human/
http://www.vaccinesafety.edu/package_inserts.htm

8 Donahue, J.G., Kieke, B.A., King, J.P. et al. (2017). ‘Association of spontaneous abortion with receipt of
inactivated influenza vaccine containing H1N1pdm09 in 2010-11 and 2011-12’, Science Direct, 35 (40), pp.
5314-5322

9Pabst, HF, Spady, DW, Marusyk, RG, et al. (1992). ‘Reduced measles immunity in infants in a well-
vaccinated population’, Pediatr Infect Dis J 11, pp. 525-529

101923 Topley, WWC, Wilson GS. (1923). ‘The spread of bacterial infection. The problem of herd
immunity’, The Journal of Hygiene 21, pp. 243-249
Fox, JP, Elveback, L, Scott, W, et al. (1971). ‘Herd immunity: basic concept and relevance to public health
immunization practices’. Am J Epidemiol 94, pp. 179-189
11 World Health Organization EpiBrief (2018) ‘A report on the epidemiology of selected vaccine-preventable
diseases in the European Region’ http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0009/370656/
epibrief-1-2018-eng.pdf

Kremer, J.R. et al (2008). ‘High Genetic Diversity of Measles Virus, World Health Organization European
Region’, Emerging Infectious Diseases, 14 (1), pp. 107-114 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/
PMC2600148/

Nasab, G.S.F., et al (2016). ‘Comparison of neutralizing antibody titers against outbreak-associated measles
genotypes (D4, H1 and B3) in Iran’, Pathogens and Disease, 74 (8) https://academic.oup.com/femspd/
article/74/8/ftw089/2632698

Ackley, S.F., et al (2018). ‘Genotype-specific measles transmissibility: a branching process analysis’, Clinical
Infectious Diseases, 66 (8), pp. 1270-1275

Hahne, S.J., et al (2016). ‘Measles outbreak among previously immunized healthcare workers, the
Netherlands, 2014’, The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 214 (12), pp. 1980-1986

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