Massive Brazilian Vaccination Raises Suspicions of Covert
Sterilization Program
http://www.lifesitenews.com/ldn/2008/aug/08081407.html
By Matthew Cullinan Hoffman
August 14, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) -
The commencement of a massive, mandatory vaccination program in Brazil has
raised suspicions among international pro-life activists, who note that the
program is similar to others in recent years that have included a hidden
sterilizing agent in the vaccines.
The campaign, which was begun last week by Brazil's pro-abortion Health
Minister, Jose Gomes Temporao, claims that its goal is to annihilate rubella in
the South American nation.
Temporao, who has expended considerable energy to legalize abortion, claims he
is concerned about the fact that 17 Brazilian children each year suffer birth
defects from the disease, in a nation of more than 180 million people. Rubella
is normally little more than a nuisance for those who contract it, with symptoms
that pass in a matter of days or weeks.
Although the number of children affected by Congenital Rubella Syndrome (CRS) is
less per capita than that of both the United Kingdom and Australia in the 1990s,
Temporao is heading a mandatory program to vaccinate 70 million Brazilians,
which would make it the largest vaccination in history.
Adolfo Castaņeda of Human Life International notes that just two years ago,
researchers found that the rubella vaccine used in a similar campaign in
Argentina was laced with Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (HCG), a pregnancy hormone
that is necessary for a newly conceived zygote to implant in the uterine wall
after conception.
When the body receives HCG in a vaccine, it perceives it as an intruder and
creates antibodies that fight the presence of the hormone in the body. The
body's immunological response is turned against pregnancy, causing abortions
when conception occurs.
"In 2006, there was a similar campaign to the current one in Brazil in
Argentina," Castaņeda writes in a recent HLI bulletin. "The presence of HCG in
various samples of the vaccine used against rubella were discovered. The
suspicion that brought about the investigation was caused by the fact that there
were very few cases of the disease in Argentina, which didn't merit a
large-scale campaign."
Castaņeda also notes that the age group of women targeted by the campaign is the
same or similar to other programs that were proven to include sterilizing agents
in vaccines.
"The age of the people who will be vaccinated is 12 to 49 years for women
(reproductive age), and between 12 and 39 for men," he writes. "The ages for
women are the same as those who received the vaccines in Nicaragua, where they
included a hormone that sterilizes the woman who receives it, and similar to the
age of those who received another sterilizing hormone in the Philippines."
In fact, as the Australian government notes in its journal, Communicable
Diseases Intelligence, small children are the primary conduit for the disease,
and highly-effective programs in the US and Australia have therefore focused on
that group (http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/conten...).
Yet the Brazilian government is ignoring children and is focusing on women in
their childbearing years.
Brazilian pro-life activist Julio Severo, who is in hiding from the Brazilian
government for his refusal to participate in forced vaccination programs, notes
that, strangely, even those who have already received the vaccine, or who have
already had rubella (thus ensuring immunity) will be required by the government
to receive the vaccine during the current drive.
"If the campaign goal is really to eliminate rubella, then why vaccinate those
already vaccinated?" he asks on his blog, Last Days Watchman. "Why compel the
vaccination of those that had the illness in the past? It is a fact more than
proven that an individual who has had rubella in the past will never have it
again."
Severo says that the campaign is seeking to find people wherever they congregate
or travel, and there is no option but to receive the vaccine. In fact, he notes,
the government has already carried out a widely-publicized prosecution of one
woman because her children did not receive some of the the mandatory vaccines.
The woman's children were taken from her custody, and co-workers who were aware
of the situation and failed to report it were prosecuted. The story has appeared
in the media as an example for those who might wish to resist the government's
efforts to forcibly vaccinate them.
He also points out that the same international agencies that are backing the
current vaccination in Brazil have been involved in research on sterilizing
vaccines for decades, and warns that these same groups, which are dedicated to
abortion and population control, cannot be trusted.
"In the mass vaccination campaigns in Argentina, Nigeria, Philippines and other
countries, UNICEF showed that it knows how to unite the worse intentions to the
most angelic appearances," writes Severo. "In Brazil, we have the assurance of
Temporao that the mass vaccination campaign is only for protecting babies and
helping families."