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Old September 24th 09, 11:43 PM posted to misc.health.alternative,misc.kids.breastfeeding,misc.kids.health,misc.kids.pregnancy,sci.med.nursing
Smarter Than You
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Posts: 27
Default Is there antifreeze in vaccines or not?


"Mark Thorson" wrote in message
...
john wrote:

Not so fast, Dr. Gorski. There IS ethylene glycol in vaccines. It's
called
2-Phenoxyethanol, and is found in childhood vaccines Infanrix, Deptacel,
Pediarix, and Ipol, amongst others. You see, the other name for
2-Phenosyethanol is ETHYLENE GLYCOL monophenyl ether.


This is the molecular structure of phenoxyethanol:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:2-...-Structure.svg

This is the structure of ethylene glycol:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Et..._structure.png

Although there are some common features between these
two molecules, there are some very important differences.

Even a single atom can dramatically change the properties
of a molecule. These two molecules differ by much more
than a single atom. For one thing, phenoxyethanol would
be completely useless as an antifreeze.

The claim that there is antifreeze in vaccine is made
because anti-vaccinationists have so little evidence
that they can use against vaccines. This is among
the strongest arguments they can make, and as anyone
can see from the molecular structures, it is bogus.
Drugs drugs drugs, chemicals oh ya chemicals.