It is very unfortunate that something like the Village Voice, which many of
us (MISTAKENLY?) believe to be a "reliable/alternative" source of
information has published this piece of JUNK JOURNALISM, which although it
does give some good information on the narrow topic of it's coverage, also
includes PROPAGANDA straight from the government and the pharmaceutical
medical/industrial complex and all of it's legal drug-pushers.

For ACCURATE information on the DANGERS of vaccination; on the FACT that
they are UNPROVEN as to efficacy OR safety; on the FACT that there are
THOUSANDS of infants yearly who are killed or permanently damaged by
vaccines; on the very likely theory that vaccination promotes LONG TERM
DETERIORATION of optimal health -leading to HIGHER PROFITS for the very
industry that makes and promotes them(!!) see:
http://www.asheville-computer.com/vaccine
related:
http://www.asheville-computer.com/homeopathy/altmedcon.htm
http://www.asheville-computer.com/issues/

Please forward this, and consider sending your own comment to the editor of
the Village Voice [[EMAIL PROTECTED]]

Dave Hartley
http://www.asheville-computer.com/dave


New Vaccines May Drug-Proof Kids
Injecting Big Brother
by Carla Spartos
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0028/spartos.shtml

The war on drugs may soon be over, but not because of legalization, stiffer
penalties, or a truce between cartels and prohibitionists. This uneasy peace
would come at the hands of pharmaceutical companies and biotech labs, which
are about to unleash the ultimate weapon: the antidrug vaccine.
One anti-cocaine vaccine, already shown to be safe for humans-

(( *Editorial NOTES: this is OBVIOUSLY A COMPLETE CROCK OF SHIT ! NO vaccine
has EVER been or EVER WILL BE "proven safe" because NONE IS!! -dave
" In regions in which there is no organized vaccination of the population,
general paralysis is rare. It is impossible to deny a connection between
vaccination and the encephalitis (brain damage) which follows it."  Journal
of the American Medical Association July 3, 1926, p.45
"No batch of vaccine can be proved safe before it is given to children."
Surgeon General of the United States Leonard Scheele, addressing an AMA
convention in 1955
"The only safe vaccine is a vaccine that is never used"
Dr. James A. Shannon, National Institutes of Health
"The decision to have your children vaccinated is yours, alone, to make"
Parents Guide to Childhood Immunization, page 5, USPHS/CDC, 1977. ))

-prevents people who snort coke from getting high. Researchers are also
testing vaccines for nicotine. And results look promising for the
eradication of PCP abuse and methamphetamine addiction. The National
Institute on Drug Abuse has funded much of the development
cost—approximately $4.5 million since 1996. "Just as medications have been
developed for other chronic diseases, such as hypertension, diabetes, and
cancer," writes NIDA in its five-year strategic plan, "drug addiction is a
disease that also merits medication for its treatment."

Looking at social ills through a medical lens is not a new phenomenon. By
studying disorders from alcoholism and compulsive gambling to attention
deficit disorder and depression, scientists have discovered not only genetic
factors responsible for so-called abnormal behavior, but also the way such
behavior affects the brain's neural map. According to Dr. Frank Vocci,
director of NIDA's Treatment Research and Development division, the antidrug
vaccines can provide a powerful weapon against substance addiction,
especially when combined with therapy and psychiatric medicine. And
vaccines, which unleash an onslaught of drug-busting antibodies, can do what
traditional treatment can't. "If a patient is in an emergency room with high
methamphetamine levels and experiencing a cardiovascular crisis," says
Vocci, "antibodies would bind the drug up and cause the individual to
excrete it." In other words, an injection of antibodies could reduce the
specter of death by overdose to a bad '70s flashback.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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"Who is going to get it? Those who have a history of cocaine abuse? Those
who may be statistically likely to become addicts? Or do you vaccinate
everybody?"
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

Though scientists have long used vaccines to trick the immune system into
thwarting lethal diseases, the antidrug vaccines are a new breed, designed
to attack pleasure-inducing chemicals that the brain craves. Some of these
new vaccines use antibodies that bind to the illegal drug, render it
inactive, and then leave the bloodstream. Others remain potent for years.
This is the type of vaccine that purged the Western world of polio and
smallpox—and may put a choke hold on civil liberties.

The human affinity for altering perception reaches far back in the
evolutionary chain. If antidrug vaccines become widely available, parents
will be able to decide whether their kids will be able to get high—even as
adults, even recreationally. And governments could target certain
communities for vaccination. "Who is going to get it?" asks Dr. Peter Cohen,
an adjunct professor at the Georgetown University Law Center, who has
written on the legal implications of the vaccines. "Those who have a history
of cocaine abuse? Those who may be statistically likely to become addicts?
Or do you vaccinate everybody?"

Cohen argues everyone should get the shots, but so far the only human tests
have been done on addicts. In one experiment by Yale University this spring,
researchers vaccinated 34 former cocaine abusers living in a residential
treatment facility. That vaccine, called TA-CD, generates antibodies that
grab onto the upper as soon as it enters the bloodstream, preventing the
drug from bumrushing the brain.

The new vaccines have limitations. Namely, addicts could still get high if
they did enough lines. Enter Dr. Donald Landry, associate professor of
medicine at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons, who's
researching so-called catalytic antibodies. With a load of them in your
bloodstream, you'd have to snort a lot of coke to feel any effect. So much
so that financial limitations (you'd have to spend a ton of money) and
physical needs (you'd have to stop and breathe) would kick in. "Everyone
attempting to quit cocaine can use the catalytic antibody," Landry says.

But if you can't get high from cocaine, you can get drunk on alcohol or
stoned on pot. Substance-abuse counselors say a vaccine alone won't solve
the problem of drug abuse, and shouldn't end up replacing more expensive—and
extensive—treatments that deal with the factors that lead to addiction.
"We're not going to run out of new and inventive things that are going to
make people high, but that doesn't mean a vaccine won't help for some
people," says Peter Kerr, a spokesman for the New York branch of Phoenix
House, who compares the use of antidrug vaccines to relying on the synthetic
opiate methadone to treat heroin addicts. "The primary emphasis is relieving
symptoms. Counseling is an ancillary factor."

Unlike methadone, which is used to fight debilitating withdrawal symptoms,
or Anabuse, which causes an alcoholic to become violently ill upon drinking,
some vaccines can last a lifetime. There's no turning back. And if the
choice of a child is in the hands of a parent, or that of a prisoner in the
hands of the government, then involuntary vaccinations become the result.
"It's hard to justify vaccinating a million children when only a small
percentage are at risk, even in an area where cocaine use is endemic," says
Landry.

The vaccines also raise questions of privacy. "Once you're vaccinated, you
have antibodies in your blood that would show up in a drug test," saysCohen.
"The least controversial solution is universal vaccination: You wouldn't be
stigmatizing any one group."

Yet mass vaccinations have always been controversial. "That's treating
people like cattle," says Joe Lehman, a spokesman for the Cato Institute, a
libertarian think tank. Lehman believes that there would be pressure to get
an antidrug vaccine, especially when it comes to insurance companies (who
might offer special premiums to the vaccinated) or employers (who in the age
of mandatory drug testing have obvious motives). Though mass, forced
vaccinations may be unlikely, a scenario in which individuals feel pressured
to get the vaccine is no less chilling in its implications.

Civil libertarians, on both the left and right ends of the political
spectrum, aren't the only ones concerned over universal vaccination. Critics
of childhood vaccinations—alternative medicine advocates, concerned
parents—are growing in number. The National Vaccine Information Center
promotes parental awareness about vaccination risks and the right to refuse
shots. Barbara Loe Fisher, president of the center, is outraged by the idea
of antidrug vaccines. "To add a vaccine to the mix that doesn't fit into
early-childhood diseases seems amazing," she says. "That we can get a
vaccine to solve every social problem is short-term thinking."

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