Stop Resisting–Your Government Knows Best

Dozens of articles have been published in the last few weeks, glorifying the removal of vaccine exemptions. The state of Vermont, whose state motto is, “Freedom and Unity,” voted 85 to 57 to remove the state’s philosophical exemption. Other states under heavy fire are California, New Jersey, Connecticut and Maine. Why should we have to fight so hard to protect our children and our own body from medical tyranny?

But the introduction of the Vaccinate All Children Act of 2015 by Congresswoman Frederica S. Wilson (FL-24) has really got me going. My biggest concern is a sneak attack, like the introduction of the Division E (now called the Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness Act, or  PREP Act), introduced by  Senator Bill Frist (R) in 2005. The ground work for Mandatory Vaccination for All was set in motion by this bill — and it was signed and delivered in 2005.

The PREP Act was not a separate piece of legislation. It was attached literally at the 11th hour to a Defense Appropriations Bill that had already been voted on and passed — and most of the legislators had already departed for Christmas break. The language provided complete insulation for pharmaceutical companies not only for bird flu products, but for nearly any future fast-tracked vaccine or medication. The drug companies can create a product that can kill you — and you have no recourse unless you can convince the Attorney General that they ‘intentionally’ tried to kill you. We could see more deaths of adults and children as time goes on, like the sad scenario of children in Mexico, … if we remove all rights to refuse.

This is a quote from chapter 10 of my book, FOWL:

The nefarious language that Congressman Obey used objecting to the “Division E” addendum deserved every bit of his tirade. Even Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) commented, ‘Generally around here we measure who the winners are and who the losers are, and we have seen over the period of the last year, year and a half, how the drug companies come out [winners] time and time again, but never, never, ever, ever like they have with this sweetheart deal.’[i]  

[i] Dodge, Catherine. Bloomberg.com 22 December 2005.

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