Saturday, October 31, 2009

Swine Flu Facts - Gulf War Syndrome

Swine flu vaccine ingredients

The flu vaccine being prepared for the H1N1 contains aluminum, formaldehyde, Squalene.
and mercury.

It was proven that Gulf War Syndrome was caused by an
ingredient called Squalene
used in the MF-59 adjuvant
in the Anthrax vaccine that was given to the troops.

So how much squalene does it take to make you sick?

The average quantity of squalene injected into the US
soldiers abroad and at home in the anthrax vaccine
during and after the Gulf War was 34.2 micrograms per
billion micrograms of water. You can find this table
of FDA analyses from the Gulf War lots on The
Military Vaccine Resource Directory website
(http://www.mvrd.org/showpage.cfm?ID=69)

These values were confirmed by Prof. R. F. Garry
before the House of Representatives. Prof Garry was
the man to discover the connection between the Gulf
War syndrome and squalene. According to his findings
(which were subsequently confirmed by multiple
university studies) the Gulf War syndrome w as caused
by squalene, which was banned by a Federal Court
Judge in 2004 from the Pentagon´s use. (Note: The use
of squalene is also currently banned by the FDA. An
exception has been made for this vaccine).

As seen on p.6 of this EMEA document
(http://www.emea.europa.eu/humandocs/PDFs/EPAR/pandemrix/H-832-en6.pdf),
the vaccine contains 10.68 mg of squalene per 0.5 ml.
This corresponds to 2,136,0000 microgrammes pr.
billion microgrammes of water, i.e. one million times
more squalene per dose than in the anthrax vaccine.

What happens when you inject squalene in rats?

A 2000 study published in the American Journal of Pathology
demonstrated a single injection of the adjuvant
squalene into rats triggered “chronic,
immune-mediated joint-specific inflammation,” also
known as rheumatoid arthritis -- this happened 100%
of the time. Every time. Arthritis
and joint pain are the two top symptoms of Gulf War
Syndrome.

Other symptoms of Gulf War Syndrome are
lymphadenopathy, rashes, photosensitive rashes, malar
rashes, chronic fatigue, chronic headaches, abnormal
body hair loss, non-healing skin lesions, aphthous< BR>ulcers, dizziness, weakness, memory loss, seizures,
mood changes, neuropsychiatric problems, anti-thyroid
effects, anaemia, elevated ESR (erythrocyte
sedimentation rate), systemic lupus erythematosus,
multiple sclerosis, ALS (amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis), Raynaud’s phenomenon, Sjorgren’s
syndrome, chronic diarrhoea, night sweats and
low-grade fevers.

Gary

Dalton Gardens, Idaho

(This is from an email I received)

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