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BRISTOL, U.K. May 5 (Lifesitenews.com) – Scientists from Bristol University in England have discovered a protein in human males which protects sperm from damage. GPX5, as the protein has been named, is reportedly manufactured only in the reproductive tract, and scientists aim to attack the body’s natural release of the protein.

Another project is to create a vaccine that would have the body create anti-bodies to GPX5, thus making for long-term disabling of the protection for sperm. Today’s National Post (NP) reports that Glaxo Wellcome, a large pharmaceutical company, is pursuing this research Dr. Len Hall heads up the project.

Scientists suggest that this vaccine would only disable healthy sperm for a period of 18 months,  however other such vaccines have been shown to be irreversible. NP notes that Dr. John Wiebe, a professor of zoology at the University of Western Ontario, holds the patent on an injection which irreversibly stops sperm production. Wiebe, a population-control zealot, comments on the new vaccine in the Post saying, “there ought to be a huge market, because overpopulation is a huge problem affecting this planet.”

Infertility vaccines have played a sinister role in coercive population control programs in the Third World. In 1996 a Philippine Medical Association Study indicated that young women who were supposedly injected with a vaccine against tetanus were also injected with the hormone human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), effectively vaccinating them against pregnancy. The study found that nearly 20 per cent of the “tetanus” vaccine carried the hCG hormones which would induce the body’s immune system to attack the hormone needed to bring an unborn child to term.

Human Life International noted at the time that suspicions about the contents of the vaccines were raised when “the tetanus vaccination campaigns in the developing world targeted only women of child-bearing or pre-child-bearing years.” HLI also reported that “the vaccination program is sponsored by the World Health Organization, an agency with a 20-year history of researching anti-fertility vaccines.”