COMPULSORY
VACCINATIONS THREATEN RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
by Mathew
D. Staver
Copyright
© 2002
Most
people associate vaccinations with the eradication of disease. Vaccinations
have been a part of American life for decades. However, many people object
to mandatory vaccinations for religious reasons. Oftentimes, these individuals
are told that they have no choice and must receive the vaccinations.
You
may be surprised to learn that some vaccinations are derived from aborted
fetal tissue. Vaccines for chicken pox, Hepatitis-A and Rubella were produced
solely from aborted fetal tissue. Even most physicians who oppose abortion
do not realize that these three vaccines are made from aborted fetal tissue.
Recently, the wife of one of our Liberty Counsel attorneys confronted her
family doctor who wanted to inject her son with the chicken pox vaccine. When
she told her doctor, who is Catholic, that the chicken pox vaccine contains
aborted fetal tissue, he was surprised. The doctor was even more surprised
when he skimmed through his medical book and found out she was right. He then
proclaimed that he was faced with a dilemma which he must now confront.
In St.
Louis County, Missouri, a county law required food handlers to obtain the
Hepatitis-A vaccine for employment. Several prominent Catholic newspapers
published articles on the morality of using the vaccine, and pointed out that
the source of the vaccine was derived from abortion. After the information
became public, more and more physicians and parents have become deeply troubled
by the ethical issues involved in the Hepatitis-A vaccine.
During
the Rubella epidemic of 1964, some doctors advised pregnant women who were
exposed to the disease to abort their children. The resulting virus strain
became known in the science world as RA/27/3. R stands for Rubella, A stands
for Abortus, 27 stands for the 27th fetus tested, and 3 stands
for the 3rd tissue explant. In other words, there were 26 abortions
prior to finding the right "species" with the active virus. The Rubella vaccine
was then cultivated from the 27th aborted baby on the lung tissue
of yet another aborted infant, WI-38. WI-38 (Wistar Institute 38) was taken
from the lung tissue of an aborted baby at 3 months gestation in the 1960s.
A second human cell line known as MRC-5 was derived from a male at 14 weeks
gestation in the 1970s. These two aborted cell lines have been used to provide
an ongoing source for many widely-used vaccines, including Hepatitis-A and
chicken pox.
The
chicken pox vaccine is known as Varivax. This vaccine was developed with the
use of aborted fetuses. It uses both the human cell lines, known as WI-38
and MRC-5. The chicken pox vaccine also contains MSG (monosodium glutamate).
According to the Food and Drug Administration, MSG is not advised for use
in infants, children, or pregnant women or children of child-bearing age,
and people with affective (mental/emotional) disorders. Dr. A. Lavin of the
Department of Pediatrics at St. Luke's Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio,
strongly opposes the chicken pox vaccine.
Studies
show that up to 3% of chicken pox vaccine recipients actually contract chicken
pox from the vaccine, and some chicken pox cases may be contracted from recently
vaccinated children. Some studies suggest that chicken pox in a vaccinated
child may be milder than in an unvaccinated child. However, some experts also
believe that this may be due to the vaccine suppressing the illness, which
can actually signal a more serious underlying chronic condition. "Atypical
measles" is a disease that occurs only in people previously vaccinated for
measles, and it is far more serious than regular measles. It is yet unknown
if "atypical chicken pox" cases will appear as a result of the use of Varivax.
The
FDA has stated that there are fewer than 10% of serious adverse reactions
and deaths following vaccines. The federal government actually pays families
of vaccine-killed or disabled children nearly $100 million dollars each year,
and has done so since 1986 through the National Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program.
There
are other vaccines that are derived from aborted fetuses for which there are
alternatives. For example, an alternative to the Polio vaccine is a vaccine
known by the name IPOL, which is not derived from aborted tissue. The alternative
for Mumps is Mumpsvax, for rabies is RabAvert and for measles is Attenuvax.
The vaccines under these names are produced either from monkey kidney cells
or chicken embryos. There are also vaccine alternatives available in the United
Kingdom, but which are not available in the United States because they are
not FDA approved. The Rubella vaccine available in the United Kingdom known
as Takahashi Strain and the Hepatitis-A vaccine with the brand name of Aimmugen
are derived from rabbit and monkey kidney tissue respectively. However, these
are not available in the United States.
In addition
to the problem of some vaccines derived from aborted tissue, there is a larger
problem with mandatory vaccines. Many people have a sincerely-held religious
belief regarding vaccines in general. These individuals believe that God created
the human body as a temple, and that the body should not be destroyed by injecting
a virus into the body. Take for example Joseph and Heyde Rotella and Maja
Leibovitz in New York City. Both families have a sincerely-held religious
belief against vaccinations. At the time, the Rotellas had a seventh-grade
daughter and Ms. Leibovitz had a second-grade daughter. The school system
required that these children receive a mandatory Hepatitis-B vaccination.
Hepatitis-B is primarily transmitted in one of three ways. Either you are
born to a mother with Hepatitis-B, or you contract it by drug use through
the sharing of needles, or you contract it through sexual contact. Injecting
their children with Hepatitis-B is like the state forcing the parents to give
their children clean needles or condoms.
In both
cases, the children were expelled from school, and in one case, Child Protective
Services was called to the scene because the child was not in school. After
several weeks of expulsion and threats of removing the children, Liberty Counsel
filed a federal lawsuit. A court order allowed the children back in school
and prohibited the school from overriding the parents' religious belief.
Liberty
Counsel has also filed a federal lawsuit against the state of Arkansas. There
the state requires mandatory vaccinations. Our clients have sincerely-held
religious beliefs opposing these mandatory vaccinations, including the chicken
pox vaccination. Despite the strong evidence of a religious belief which opposes
the chicken pox vaccination, the state of Arkansas insists that the parent
vaccinate her child. Our federal lawsuit challenges the state's law on religious
freedom grounds.
Vaccinations
are becoming a wave of the future. Large pharmaceutical companies are lobbying
state legislators to require mandatory vaccinations of all school-aged children.
Some people have sincerely-held religious beliefs against vaccines in general,
while others have objections to certain vaccines because of their aborted
fetal contents. Either way, the state cannot steamroll a person's religious
belief. In many cases, the government cannot even legitimately argue a compelling
reason for the vaccines. Chicken pox is not life-threatening, and Hepatitis-B
is primarily contracted through drug use and sexual contact. Moreover, Hepatitis-B,
according to the Center for Disease Control, has several serious side effects,
including Multiple Sclerosis.
Next
time you are confronted with mandatory vaccines, take a moment to reexamine
your religious beliefs and become educated about the contents, the purpose,
and the risk of vaccinations.
U.S.
Vaccines Derived From Abortion (1)
| Disease |
Vaccine Name |
Manufacturer |
Cell line
(Fetal) |
| Polio |
Poliovax |
Aventis-Pasteur |
MRC-5 |
Measles, Mumps, Rubella
Rubella only
|
MMR II
Biavax II
Meruvax II
|
Merck & Company |
WI-38 |
| Rabies |
Imovax |
Aventis-Pasteur |
MRC-5 |
| Hepatitis-A |
Havrix Vaqta
|
SmithKline-Beecham
Merck & Company
|
MRC-5
MRC-5 |
| Chicken pox |
Varivax |
Merck & Company |
WI-38 and MRC-5 |
U.S.
Vaccine Alternatives (2)
No
alternatives for Chickenpox, Rubella or Hepatitis-A in U.S.
| Disease |
Vaccine Name |
Manufacturer |
Cell line |
| Polio |
IPOL 800-822-2463
|
Aventis-Pasteur |
Monkey kidney cells |
| Mumps |
Mumpsvax
800-422-9675
|
Merck & Company |
Chick embryo |
| Rabies |
RabAvert
800-244-7668
|
Chiron Therapeutics |
Chick embryo |
| Measles |
Attenuvax
800-422-9675
|
Merck & Company |
Chick embryo |
1.
http://www.cogforlife.org/fetalvaccines.htm;
http://www.cogforlife.org/vaxbrochsample.htm
2.
Id.
The information
contained herein in not intended to render legal advice. Factual and legal
issues may arise that must be considered in each circumstance. If legal advice
is necessary, the services of a competent attorney should be sought.
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