reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 1986, under Ronald Reagan, Congress signed into law the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act, which removed liability from vaccine manufacturers. The change was described as manufacturers going to Ronald Reagan to request exemption from liability because parents were starting to sue after vaccine-related injuries, and manufacturers said they would stop making vaccines unless liability was removed.
In layman’s terms, the transcript compares it to a car accident: if a faulty car seat injures or kills a child, the manufacturer can be sued; but if a child is injured or killed by a vaccine, the manufacturer can no longer be sued. The act is described as creating a system where each vaccine vial carries a 75¢ tax. That 75¢ tax is put into an account connected to VAERS. People file a VAERS report, and the transcript states only one percent of people actually report injuries to VAERS. The information then goes to a special court, which determines whether a child was injured and provides a small settlement from the tax, while leaving the manufacturer free of all liability.
The transcript links 1986 to an increase in the vaccination schedule, describing it as expanding over time from eight to 10 to 12, and later to ranges of 20 to 30 to 40, with vaccines by age five. It further claims that after liability was removed, they stopped turning in safety studies, and that although studies were done, they were no longer turned in. The transcript states the schedule increased and added vaccines so that by age 18 children get 72 doses, while asserting there were no studies showing the safety of the vaccines together.
The transcript also notes that many vaccines are described as “three in one,” and says that is another story for later. It concludes with an example that when a person gets a “cert” they are not just getting a tetanus vaccine.