Vaccines & DNA changes
Vaccines and Production of Negative Genetic Changes in
Humans (c) 1996-1998 Leading Edge Research Group Vaccination
and Genetic Change: Mobility of Genetic Material Between
Life
One of the indications that vaccinations may in fact be
changing the genetic structure of humans became evident in
September of 1971, when scientists at the University of Geneva
made the discovery that biological substances entering directly
into the bloodstream could become part of human genetic
structure. Originally, Japanese bacteriologists discovered that
bacteria of one species transferred their own specific
antibiotic resistance to bacteria of an entirely different
species. Dr. Maurice Stroun and Dr. Philip Anker in the
Department of Plant Physiology at the University of Geneva,
began to accumulate evidence that the transfer of genetic
information is not confined to bacteria, but can also occur
between bacteria and higher plants and animals. According to an
article in World Medicine on September 22, 1971, "Geneva
scientists are convinced that normal animal and plant cells
shed DNA, and that this DNA is taken up by other cells in the
organism."
In one experiment, scientists in Geneva
extracted the auricles of frog hearts and dipped them for
several hours in a suspension of bacteria. Afterward, they
found a high percentage of RNA-DNA hybridization between
bacterial DNA extracted from bacteria of the same species
as that used in the experiment and titrated DNA extracted
from the auricles which had been dipped in the bacterial
suspension. Bacterial DNA had been absorbed by the animal
cells. This phenomenon has been dubbed transcession. There
is evidence that this kind of phenomenon is happening all
the time within the human body. It is conceivable, for
example, that heart damage following rheumatic fever could
the the result of the immune system reacting to its own
cells producing a foreign RNA complex after absorption of
foreign DNA.
In Science magazine, November 10, 1972, bacterial RNA was
demonstrated in frog brain cells after a bacterial peritoneal
infection. In the April 1973 issue of the Journal of
Bacteriology, transcription of spontaneously released bacterial
DNA was found to be incorporated into cellular nuclei of frog
auricles. Studies by Phillipe Anker and Maurice Stroun have
indicated spontaneous release of DNA material from mammalian
cells, spontaneous transfer of DNA from bacteria to higher
organisms, spontaneous transfer of DNA between cells of higher
organisms, release of RNA by mammalian cells, and biological
activity of released complexes containing RNA.
Malignant Cellular Transformations Caused By Foreign DNA:
There is evidence that freely circulating foreign DNA can cause
malignancy. In a 1977 issue of International Review of
Cytology, Volume 51, Anker and Stroun discuss the possible
effects of foreign DNA causing malignant cell transformations.
When foreign DNA is transcribed into a cell of a different
organism, "this general biological event is related to the
uptake by cells of spontaneously released bacterial DNA, thus
suggesting the existence of circulating DNA. In view of the
malignant transformations obtained with DNA, the oncogenic
(cancer-causing) role of circulating DNA is postulated."
The discovery in 1975 that viruses causing cancer in animals
had a special enzyme called reverse transcriptase makes the
problem even more interesting. These kind of viruses are called
RNA viruses. When an RNA virus has the reverse transcriptase
enzyme within its structure, it allows the virus to actually
form strands of DNA which easily integrate with the DNA of the
host cell which it infects. Studies by Dr. Robert Simpson of
Rutgers University indicate that RNA viruses which do not cause
cancer can also from DNA, even without the presence of reverse
transcriptase. DNA formed in this way from an RNA virus is
called a provirus. It is known that some non-cancerous viruses
have a tendency to exist as proviruses for long periods of time
in cells without causing any apparent disease. In other words,
they remain latent.
Some examples of common RNA viruses that do not cause
cancer, per se, but have the capacity to form proviruses are
influenza, measles, mumps and polio viruses. In the October 22,
1967 British Medical Journal, it was brought out by German
scientists that multiple sclerosis seemed to be provoked by
vaccinations against smallpox, typhoid, tetanus, polio,
tuberculosis and diptheria. Even earlier, in 1965, Zintchenko
reported 12 cases in which MS became evident after a course of
antirabies vaccinations. Remember that millions of people
between 1950 and 1970 were injected with polio vaccines
containing simian virus 40 (SV-40) transferred from
contaminated monkey kidney cells used to culture the vaccine.
It is impossible to remove animal viruses from vaccine
cultures. You are reminded that SV-40, the 40th virus to be
discovered in simian tissue, is a cancer-causing virus.
Immunization programs against influenza, measles, mumps and
polio are in fact seeding humans with RNA and forming
proviruses which become latent for long periods in throughout
the body, only to re-awaken later on. Post-polio syndrome is a
good example of this problem. Other examples may include the
so-called mesenchymal and collegen diseases, such as rheumatoid
arthritis, multiple sclerosis and lupus erythmatosis, where
antibodies are formed by the immune system against the person's
own tissues - tissues which have been impregnated with foreign
genetic material. According to a special issue of Postgraduate
Medicine in May 1962, "although the body generally will not
make antibodies against its own tissues, it appears that slight
modification of the antigenic character of tissues may cause it
to appear foreign to the immune system and thus a fair target
for antibody production." Two years later in 1964, studies were
conducted on the polyoma virus, a tumor-producing DNA virus. It
was discovered that the persistent genetic DNA material in the
polyoma virus brought about malignant transformations in
hamster embryo cell cultures. This was reported in the November
23, 1964 issue of the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
Even common non-tumor viruses, including those in smallpox
vaccine and polio virus 2, can act as carcinogens. It was
reported in Science on December 15, 1961 that these common viruses acted as
catalysts in producing cancer when given to mice in
combination with known organic carcinogens in amounts too
small to induce tumors themselves. This means that some
vaccinations will induce cancer, when combined with the
growing problem of environmental pollution from toxic
by-products of agriculture (pesticides on and in food) and
industry. Of course, this information is hidden from the
public, which is why the FDA, EPA and the agricultural
industries can get away with "sanctioning" small amounts
of pollutants in food, water and air. As an aside, it has
already been admitted that polio vaccinations have caused
100% of all polio in the United States since 1980 and the
predominant cases of all paralytic polio since 1972
(Science, April 4, 1977). It is suspected that the Salk
and Sabin vaccines, made of monkey tissue culture, have
also been responsible for the major increase in leukemia
in the United States.
The use of viruses, bacteria and animal tissue cultures in
mass immunization campaigns, considering that this information
has been known for 20 years, constitutes an intentionally
created hazard to humans. The global impact on the wide range
of genotypes relative to human beings is difficult to assess.
This fact is ignored and suppressed from public knowledge,
despite a 1984 plea by some U.S. physicians to the United
Nations in a report. Persistence of long-term viruses and
foreign proteins and their relationship to chronic and
degenerative disease was also pointed out by Dr. Robert Simpson
of Rutgers University in 1976, when he addressed science
writers at an American Cancer Society seminar, saying "these
proviruses could be molecules in search of a disease." Dr.
Wendell Winters, a virologist at the University of California
noted, "immunizations may cause changes in slow viruses and
changes in the DNA mechanism." Although host cells containing
latent viral particles operate more or less normally, they
begin to synthesize viral proteins under the guidance of the
viral DNA, eventually creating the circumstances for various
autoimmune diseases, including diseases of the central nervous
system, which unfortunately add to the growing load of aberrant
social behavior patterns.
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