Hawaii H1N1 Resolution
Advances Vaccination Exemptions
Department of Health officials in Hawaii were overruled by County
of Hawaii directors supporting a resolution favoring First Amendment
constitutional rights and vaccination exemptions for everyone
demanding them.
The nearly unanimous 7-1 Big Island of Hawaii Council vote sent
a strong message to State and Federal policy makers to consider
a majority of people who solidly distrust risky vaccines in general,
and health officials' claims of safety regarding H1N1 vaccines
in particular.
The vote demonstrated the power of local community activists to
rebuke "top down" policies advancing "mandatory"
vaccinations during declared emergencies. The Council's decision
backed the majority of people unwilling to lose health freedoms
to Federal governors directing State health officials on behalf
of BigPharma special interests.
The Resolution
(237-09) urges State and Federal legislators in Hawaii "to
amend vaccine laws to include medical, religious, and philosophical
exemptions from any vaccine program," including those declared
urgent by health officials.
Proponents declared this a victory for health freedom--a warning
to health officials seeking mandatory vaccination authorizations
under Federal "national emergency" codes that expand
State health official powers under the Model State Emergency Health
Powers Act.
The vote reflects a nationwide trend of increasing public distrust
of official proclamations of vaccination safety and efficacy.
A solid
majority of medical doctors, and nearly 70% of parents polled
by Consumer
Reports, feared the new vaccines and were determined not
to recommend them.
After exhaustive research conducted by Council researchers and
attorneys, and many drafts, the Resolution stated, "there
is insufficient scientific evidence proving that vaccines are
safe or effective, therefore it is not in the best interest of
public health to recommend vaccinations without exemptions."
"WHEREAS, in the wake of potential harm to the individual
and the public from vaccinations, and the vacillating interpretation
of 'vaccine science,'" the Resolution declares, "it
is in the public's best interest to amend the vaccine laws to
include the right of medical, religious, and philosophical exemptions
from any vaccination program."
The Resolution was advanced by native Hawaiian County Councilwoman,
Emily
Naeole-Beason, who heard from several constituents concerned
about vaccine-injuries. Many complaints received by the Council
cited the toxic ingredient mercury linked to neurodevelopmental
and behavioral disorders in children denied by public health officials.
"This is a victory for health freedom, common sense, and
U.S. Constitutional entitlements," Council Vice Chair Naeole-Beason
said. "I am very proud of our Council who put public safety
ahead of special interests."
"We are compelled by science and history to not repeat deadly
mistakes," said Rev. RJ Hampton, Legislative Aide to Naeole-Beason.
"Our office studied vaccine science, and edited the Resolution
to read, 'that any vaccine known to contain harmful viruses
or any materials known to prompt autoimmune diseases or cancer
risks shall provide cause for exemption for any person in the
State of Hawai'i who so desires such exemption.'"
"This is a win for 'We the People,'" said Dr.
Leonard Horowitz, a Harvard-trained authority in vaccinations
and emerging diseases who advised the research committee that
considered opinions of several leading U.S. Constitutional attorneys.
Opposition came from the Department of Health Director, Chiyome
L Fukino, along with Sarah
Y. Park, Chief of the State's Disease Outbreak Control Division.
The two medical doctors, heavily supported by the Honolulu Star
Bulletin, wrote that "a number of inaccuracies pertaining
to immunization were cited in the Resolution . . . ," but
failed to show any or send anyone to the County meeting to defend
their views.
Dr. Horowitz responded to the Park-Fukino indictment by encouraging
Council members to resist health officials' gross conflicting
interests and perverse pseudoscientific, and otherwise baseless,
testimony.
In an Affidavit
to be mailed to Hawaii's State and Federal lawmakers who will
vote on the Resolution next, Dr. Horowitz revealed a "conspiracy
to cover-up media relations between FUKINO's press officers and
agents for the Honolulu Star Bulletin . . ." The Bulletin
feeds and publishes Associated Press (AP) propaganda advancing
vaccination agendas on behalf of AP director, Rupert Murdoch,
and his politically-powerful partners in the Partnership
for New York City (PFNYC), the world's wealthiest biotechnology
investment group.
Besides this conflicting interest, Murdoch's son James directs
GlaxoSmithKline
that markets one of the best selling H1N1 vaccines, and Tamiflu,
also purchased by the Fukino's department.
Plus, Rupert Murdoch's Co-Chairman of PFNYC, Lloyd Blankfein,
owns a majority share of MedImmune that produces the H1N1 FLUMIST
vaccine that Dr. Fukino additionally stockpiled for Hawaiian distribution.
"Wow! Now we know why Auntie Emily gets zero support from
the state's main newspapers," replied Rev. Hampton after
reading Dr. Horowitz's discoveries. "It's an age old battle
between 'We the People' versus corrupt corporations that pollute
our minds, bodies, and environments for profit."
Before the 7-1 vote, Dr. Horowitz urged the Council to "limit
Hawai'i health officials' grossly overstepped authority, and protect
those of us intelligent enough to see the forest of reality through
the trees of media propaganda, pseudoscientific fraud, and pharmaceutically
administered pangenocide."
The Resolution moves on to Honolulu where health officials have
greater legislative support from lobbyists, and the media, advancing
drug industry special interests.
Reference Source 220
December 10, 2009
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