Why Do “They” Really Put Aluminum In Vaccines? This May Be The Answer

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by Arjun Walia, The Pulse:

Are aluminum adjuvants necessary for some vaccines to work? Is there another way? This article explores concerns with aluminum containing vaccines and why such an extremely toxic substance is used.

A number of childhood vaccines, like the HPV vaccine, contain aluminum adjuvants. It’s also used in DTaP vaccines, the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, hepatitis B vaccines and many more. Aluminum adjuvants have been used in various vaccines since the 1930s. Despite this fact, government health authorities have claimed that it’s safe despite the fact that they’ve never provided adequate studies or data to prove this. TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/

The CDC currently recommends up to 22 aluminum containing vaccines from birth up to the age of 18 years old.

2011 study published in Current Medical Chemistry explains,

“Aluminum is an experimentally demonstrated neurotoxin and the most commonly used vaccine adjuvant. Despite almost 90 years of widespread use of aluminum adjuvants, medical science’s understanding about their mechanisms of action is still remarkably poor. There is also a concerning scarcity of data on toxicology and pharmacokinetics of these compounds. In spite of this, the notion that aluminum in vaccines is safe appears to be widely accepted. Experimental research, however, clearly shows that aluminum adjuvants have a potential to induce serious immunological disorders in humans”

It’s 2024 now, and we have a wealth of science that has shown cause for concern. I’ve written about this previously multiple times and provided various examples.

The article below would be my latest example if you’re interested in examining some of these concerns a little deeper. I also briefly touched upon some in this article you’re reading now.

A Curious Case of Aluminum, Vaccines, Autism & Censorship Before COVID

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13 FEBRUARY 2023
A Curious Case of Aluminum, Vaccines, Autism & Censorship Before COVID

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So let us examine the question of, why do they put aluminum in some vaccines?

The FDA explains,

“Aluminum salts are incorporated into some vaccine formulations as an adjuvant.  An adjuvant is a substance added to some vaccines to enhance the immune response of vaccinated individuals.”

Dr. Martin Howell Friede, Unit Head of the Product & Delivery Research team (PDR) for the Department of Immunization, Vaccines and Biologicals at the World Health Organization, explained why adjuvants are added to vaccines at the World Vaccine Summit in 2019,

“When we add an adjuvant, it’s because it is essential. We do not add adjuvants to vaccines because we want to do so, but when we add them it adds to the complexity. And I give courses every year on ‘how do you develop vaccines’ and ‘how do you make vaccines’ and the first lesson is, while you are making your vaccine, if you can avoid using an adjuvant, please do so. Lesson two is, if you’re going to use an adjuvant, use one that has a history of safety, and lesson three is, if you’re not going to do that, think very carefully.”

He also criticized the assumption that if an adjuvant like aluminum appears to be safe for one vaccine, it should not be presumed to be safe for other vaccines. Dr. Friede said that current safety surveillance is quite effective at determining immediate effects (such as immediate injury (local) to the arm at the injection site), but not as effective in identifying “systemic” long term adverse events.

Ingesting Not The Same As Injecting

The FDA does mention this local factor, but does not mention long-term concerns that have been shown by the more recent science on this subject.

“Aluminum adjuvant containing vaccines have a demonstrated safety profile of over many decades of use and have only uncommonly been associated with severe local reactions. Of note, the most common source of exposure to aluminum is from eating food or drinking water.”

– FDA

I would like to note here that the FDA states the most common source of exposure to aluminum is from eating food and drinking water. This is a very misleading statement when discussing aluminum in the context of vaccines. Exposure to aluminum from vaccines is a much more acute type of exposure.

This is because when you inject aluminum, it goes into a different compartment of your body. It doesn’t come into the same mechanism of excretion, like urine, as it does when you ingest it. The whole idea of an aluminum adjuvant is that it is meant to stick around and allow that antigen to be presented over and over again persistently.

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