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Biowarfare: CDC Issues Plan
for Mass Smallpox Vaccinations
Questions Raised on MEHPA
and Microbiologist Deaths
by Joe Taglieri and
Michael C. Ruppert
Sept. 24, 2002, 19:00 PDT (FTW) - Federal
officials today released a plan instructing states to deliver
smallpox vaccinations should an outbreak occur due to a terrorist
attack.
The plan details how states can inoculate up to one million people
in 10 days after confirming only a single smallpox infection in
the entire nation. Medical professionals, academics and state
health officials have expressed doubts about the effectiveness,
timing and costs of the plan issued by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC).
Dr. Len Horowitz, a healthcare researcher who recently authored a
book on deadly viruses, noted the possibility of the Bush
Administration using a biological attack to further an agenda of
suppressing civil liberties.
"This is standard Machiavellian theory in practice," said
Horowitz. "These political and public health problems are created
to effect outcomes that have been prepared for in advance and are
consistent with economic, political and ideological orientations
consistent with population control, better known as genocide. In
summary, it is managed chaos and very deadly."
According to press reports, the CDC's plan does not specifically
say what kind of attack would warrant a nationwide vaccination
program, nor does it specify who would issue the decision to begin
one.
The CDC's vaccination guide also neglects to address the "vexing
and politically delicate issue" of whether to vaccinate emergency
personnel or public health workers, the New York Times reported.
Health and human services secretary Tommy G. Thompson expects a
decision from the White House on this by the end of September.
According to the Washington Post, the number of medical personnel
to be vaccinated ranges from 20,000, as recommended by one CDC
advisory panel, to another proposal's call for 500,000.
The plan does specify 75 million doses of the vaccine in the U.S.
stockpile are to be delivered in one day and 280 million doses
within one week.
It also provides guidelines for maintaining security and order at
clinics in the event of an unruly, panic-stricken crowd, and
advises on location and transportation issues. Busses or subways
might transport people to shopping malls or sports arenas for
vaccination, according to the CDC guide.
MORE BIOWARFARE DEVELOPMENTS
FTW's reporting on the mysterious post-9-11 deaths of 15
microbiologists, some of whom have done research on infectious
diseases, has drawn the attention of and sometimes questionable
rebuttals by major publications in the U.S. and Canada. The New
York Times last month expended 7,800 words in an effort to explain
away these recent deaths as coincidence.
However, the announcement of the government's ambiguously worded
plan for voluntary smallpox inoculations provides more reason to
question government motives in its support of the Model Emergency
Health Powers Act (MEHPA). MEHPA has now been passed in 14 states,
according to The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).
[See FTW's previous reporting on this topic at
http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/ww3/index.html#bio]
MEHPA makes it a criminal offense to refuse a state-ordered
vaccination or medical procedure. In some states where it has
already become law, refusing a compulsory vaccination is a felony.
States have some leeway in determining the severity of the
penalties, but in all cases the act permits the immediate
confiscation and/or destruction of any private property without
any procedural review in the event of a health emergency.
The act made its debut last year after research at Johns Hopkins
and authorship by a Georgetown University law professor. It is
strongly supported by the Department of Health and Human Services,
which doles out federal funds for state medical assistance
programs.
MEHPA has been passed in Utah, South Dakota, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Florida, Georgia, Maryland, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine,
Delaware, South Carolina, Arizona and Hawaii. The legislation has
been introduced in California, Nevada, New York, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia, and North Carolina.
WEST NILE VIRUS
The recent, rapid spread of the West Nile Virus has raised
concerns from health researchers that the virus might be either a
test model for the spread of a disease agent, or a psychological
preparation to condition the populace to be more receptive of
state-mandated vaccinations.
NewsMax.com reported today that a letter sent in 1995 by President
Clinton's CDC director listed West Nile Virus as "one of nearly
two-dozen forms of viruses, retroviruses, bacteria and fungi
provided by the U.S. to Iraq in the 1980s."
Earlier this month, Sen. Patrick Leahy described as "credible"
reports that outbreaks in the U.S. of West Nile were an act of
bioterror, and he suggested the attack's purpose was to test the
nation's defenses against a biological attack.
CIVIL LIBERTIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH
There is an abundance of credible information to justify concern
about the impact of recent government actions on civil liberties
and the overall health of the population. Smallpox vaccinations
contain significant risks for illness or death for people with
certain skin or immune system disorders, cancer patients, pregnant
women, and babies under a year old. The New York Times reported
that millions of Americans have health disorders which put them at
risk should they need or be required to have a smallpox
vaccination.
On June 12, President Bush signed the $4.6 billion Bioterrorism
Response Act of 2002, which has allocated billions of dollars to
major pharmaceutical companies for rapid development of new
vaccines. This, despite the fact that since 9-11 a number of press
sources have reported that the U.S. government has already
acquired some 300 million doses of smallpox vaccine. The U.S.
population is currently 288 million.
Last spring the FDA eliminated standard requirements that new
vaccines be tested on humans for efficacy prior to use in the
general population.
Also this year the federal Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled
that it was legal to forcibly drug a criminal suspect who has not
been convicted even if the suspect had not exhibited violent
behavior.
Today's smallpox vaccine announcement combined with MEHPA
demonstrates that the U.S. government, through the state agencies
dependent upon federal funding, will soon be in the position to
compel Americans to take vaccines that might not work and pose a
significant health risk. The government will also be able to
impose legal punishment on those who refuse vaccinations.
According to the White House's proposal for a Department of
Homeland Security, the federal government is also asking for
technologies to determine via "non invasive" measures whether or
not members of the population have received appropriate
vaccinations.
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