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The Soon Coming Judgment Of God Upon America and How To Escape It                161
saying. What is known is that “Mycoplasma is now considered among the most common vaccine
contaminants.”
557
Squalene
Squalene occurs naturally in the body; it is an acyclic hydrocarbon (an oily substance)
which is a precursor to cholesterol. Squalene can be used as an adjuvant. An adjuvant has the
ability to stimulate the immune system. For this reason, adjuvants are used in vaccines. But
certain adjuvants can cause permanent organ damage and incurable diseases; many scientist
include squalene in this category.
558
Oil adjuvants “have proven so harmful in the past century
that some countries now consider their use in animals cruel and inhumane.”
559
The Material
Safety Data Sheet for squalene from Aldrich Chemical Company (one of several manufacturers
of squalene) states: “May be harmful by inhalation, ingestion, or skin absorption.”
560
Despite the
above, squalene can frequently be found in the military's anthrax vaccine but the Department of
Defense says it doesn't know how it got there.
The US Army began testing experimental oil adjuvant in troops as early as 1951. In the
1960s, the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board even recommended “that the adjuvant be
injected into every man and woman serving in the military—license or no license. During World
War II, in response to a perceived biological warfare threat, the Army also injected an
experimental vaccine into hundreds of thousands of American troops, landing more than fifty
thousand of them in the hospital.”
561
The Department of Defense (DOD) began experiments using squalene in anthrax vaccine
in 1987 and in 1989 they began “conducting experiments on US military personnel with oil
adjuvants.” It appears these two studies are linked; if they are, it has not been made public. After
seventeen years of research “there is still no oil adjuvant considered safe enough to license for
human use in the United States or Britain.”
562
“Based on Department of Defense and FDA data
on people injected with anthrax vaccine in the 1990s (the overwhelming majority being military
personnel), the licensed manufacturer of anthrax vaccine, BioPort, reports that recipients of its
vaccine have developed rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and multiple sclerosis following
immunization.”
563
On April 6, 1998, a military research scientist, Dr. Colonel Carl R. Alving was
interviewed by the US Government Accounting Office (GAO) about squalene and the anthrax
vaccine. Alving told the investigators that he “doubted that a vaccine with squalene would
produce a meaningful antibody response,” meaning that it would not provide protection against
anthrax. But later on the same day he told the same investigators if he had been asked to develop
an anthrax vaccine for the Gulf War on a crash basis he “would have recommended MF59 for
anthrax.” MF59 is an oil based squalene adjuvant.
564
Why would a military doctor recommend
using a substance known to cause chronic diseases which would not even make the anthrax
vaccine effective?
In 1997, Dr. Robert Gary, Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Tulane
University Medical School, developed an assay system for the detection of squalene anti-bodies.
Within a short period he ran tests on eighty-six blood samples of Gulf War vets. Of those who
reported being sick, 95 percent tested positive for squalene anti-bodies.
565
When your body
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