Wednesday, June 4th, 2003
Direct Order: An
Award-Winning Documentary Tells the
Story of Members of the Military who
were Ordered Against their Will to
Take the Controversial Anthrax Vaccine
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Id rather have caught a bullet
from an AK 47 than gotten injected
with this stuff. At least I would have
known what my fate would have been.
Federal regulators last week
approved a plan by biotechnology
company, VaxGen to test its
experimental anthrax vaccine on about
100 people.
The human volunteers will be
injected with the experimental vaccine
to see if it's safe and produces the
desired immune response.
VaxGen was awarded a $13.6 million
federal contract to begin work on the
anthrax vaccine. The company is
applying for two more anthrax vaccine
contracts. The contracts are expected
to be awarded later this year for
advanced testing and manufacturing of
25 million doses.
In the last few years, a number of
published studies have linked anthrax
vaccination to the development of Gulf
War Syndrome, among them a study in
the British medical journal the
Lancet. Hundreds of soldiers have
refused the shots after evidence
emerged that the vaccinations are
connected to a variety of illnesses.
But then the Bush administration
went on the offensive. The Pentagon
funded an Institute of Medicine study
which concluded in March 2002 the
anthrax vaccine is safe and effective
against all anthrax strains and routes
of infection. Its conclusions were
based on unpublished research - also
funded by the Pentagon.
The story doesn't stop there.
Bioport, the nation's sole, licensed
anthrax vaccine lab has repeatedly
failed FDA inspections which found
among other things, contamination.
The FDA cleared BioPort's
manufacturing plant to begin producing
the vaccine again in January 2002 -
months after the letters containing
anthrax were sent to Congress and news
organizations. Bioport was also
allowed to distribute the 500,000
doses of the vaccine already in stock.
The vaccine was offered to some postal
workers and others who were exposed.
But most refused to take it.
The anthrax vaccine is mandatory
for all military service members
assigned to high-risk areas. At
least part of the six-shot series,
which takes a year and a half to
administer, has been given to about
700,000 service members. It will be
eventually administered to all 2.5
million service members.
Since 1998, when the vaccinations
began, nearly 500 active-duty
service-members have refused the
vaccine, and more than 100 have been
court-martialed. According to
government figures, approximately 500
to 1,000 pilots and flight crew
members have quit, resigned or
transferred from the Air National
Guard or reserves rather than take the
vaccine.
Award-winning documentary Direct
Order tells the story of members of
the military who were ordered against
their will to receive the
controversial anthrax vaccine.
- Direct Order -
award-winning documentary
directed by Scott Miller and
narrated by Michael Douglas.
Link:
To purchase an audio or video copy
of this entire program, call
1 (800) 881-2359. |