Please be advised that the “uproar” was not about squalene in individually tested Anthrax Vaccine samples. It was about “Antibodies to Squalene in Recipients of Anthrax Vaccine.”
Isn’t that at least a very similar subject for the uproar? Are you saying that the uproar is about how recipients magically developed antibodies to squalene, independent of the vaccine? I think not. That just seems like a ridiculous statement to me. Then again, I could be missing a vital difference due to my lack of training.
The concern is and was that healthy veterans were suddenly stricken with autoimmune disease and other serious symptoms.
Good. That should be what we are talking about then. If there was no squalene in the vaccine, then let’s stop talking about the anthrax vaccine and talk about something else. In fact, let’s stop talking about squalene as if it were the answer to the Gulf War Syndrome enigma.
I am all for studying all possible causes of Gulf War Syndrome, but from what I have read, this has been studied (and concluded that there was no link between anthrax vaccine and GWS). Next possible cause please.
RE: Half a dozen of one... by Anonymous :: NR0 :: Show
How about the pesticides and pills given to the troops?
Jim Moss
http://members.cox.net/jimmoss/gws012.htm