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Injected : A Pre-Vaccination Primer for Parents with Infants and Small Children

By Prager, Jeffrey, J.

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Book Id: WPLBN0100003260
Format Type: PDF eBook:
File Size: 2.78 MB
Reproduction Date: 10/15/2015

Title: Injected : A Pre-Vaccination Primer for Parents with Infants and Small Children  
Author: Prager, Jeffrey, J.
Volume:
Language: English
Subject: Non Fiction, Medicine, Injectable Vaccines
Collections: Authors Community, Science
Historic
Publication Date:
2015
Publisher: Anarchy Books & Runaway Slaves, LLC
Member Page: Jeff Prager

Citation

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J. Prage, B. J. (2015). Injected : A Pre-Vaccination Primer for Parents with Infants and Small Children. Retrieved from http://gutenberg.cc/


Description
"Injected" uses 50 peer reviewed reports and studies to examine the probability of genetic mutation and the subsequent epigenetic consequences of vaccination in the human body.

Summary
We use peer review to examine genetic mutation as a result of vaccination, predisposing individuals to disease and disorder.

Excerpt
Vaccines and Production of Negative Genetic Changes in Humans 1996-1998 Leading Edge Research Group Vaccination and Genetic Change: Mobility of Genetic Material Between Life Forms: 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 the 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.”

 
 



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