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Hepatitis B vaccine may increase MS risk

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Warnings that vaccines may increase the risk of Multiple Sclerosis and other auto immune diseases are not new ("Hepatitis B vaccine may increase MS risk," Vancouver Sun Sept. 14/04).

Persistence of long-term viruses and foreign proteins and their relationship to chronic and degenerative disease was pointed out by Dr. Robert Simpson of Rutgers University in 1976, when he addressed science writers at an American Cancer Society seminar, saying "these proviruses could be molecules in search of a disease."

Dr. Simpson went on to state that provirusues in vaccines could be seeding the population with cancers and auto immune diseases such as arthritis, asthma, lupus and multiple sclerosis.

Dr. Wendell Winters, a virologist at the University of California has noted, "immunizations may cause changes in slow viruses and changes in the DNA mechanism."

An indication that vaccinations may be changing the genetic structure of humans became evident in September of 1971, when scientists at the University of Geneva, Switzerland, made the discovery that biological substances entering directly into the bloodstream could become part of human genetic structure.

Latent viral particles in host cells can begin to synthesize viral proteins under the guidance of the viral DNA, creating the circumstances for various auto immune diseases, including diseases of the central nervous system such as multiple sclerosis and autism.

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