Category: Liberty

  • Individualism: True And False; A Review

    The following review is for the Article “Individualism: True and False”, which can be found in the book: “Individualism and Economic Order” by F. A. Hayek. The Mises Institute graciously provides a pdf or ebook copy of this book for free here.

    You know what other Austrian wrote about Economic Order....?
    F. A. Hayek

    When slightly younger me was in college I was taking my required History of Economic Thought course. I had always been free market leaning, but had been a bit put off by Neo-Classical Economics. When my instructor, a real deal Marxist/Moaist, taught us about the “Cambridge Capital Controversy“, I was a completely shaken. I knew I couldn’t stick with the Neo-Classical framework, as it was founded on circular reasoning. Fortunately, the professor had assigned us to read one book by an influential economist, and present it to the class. While scanning through the list of approved books I saw Individualism and Economic Order by F. A. Hayek. It looked right up my alley. I had heard of Hayek before, but never read any of his works. I knew he was a free market economist, but also a “Gold Bug”, so younger me had avoided him as a wrong-thinker. Now that my faith in those who had derided him for his monetary views was destroyed, why not give him a shot?

    Reading and studying this book, which is a series of related articles by Hayek, was a pivotal moment for my political ideological growth, and in particular the first Article “Individualism: True and False”. What Hayek talked about made thoughts I had already been having clarify. It resolved conflicts I had been tussling with and urged me to investigate more into him and the Austrian school of thought. And that is why i am today reviewing the primary article from the book.

    WE?!?!?! YOU GOT A F****** MOUSE IN YOUR POCKET?
    Individualist oppressing minority group, circa 2019, colorized

    In “Individualism: True and False”, Hayek sets the tone for the rest of the book, arguing for the social system of Individualism. But before he can do that, he needs to clear some things up. You see, in Hayek’s mind there is a lot of confusion in the world about what Individualism is. Some of that confusion is created intentionally, by the opponents of individualism, and some springs from the fact that there are two distinct philosophical lines of thought that claim the title of Individualism. Hayek (in a true Scottish fashion) labels these as “True” individualism, and “False” individualism.

    For “True” individualism, Hayek sees it’s roots in the Scottish Enlightenment and subsequent British philosophers. Thinkers like Adam Smith, David Hume and Edmund Burke as well as Lord Acton and Alexis de Tocqueville, are the foremost paragons of this type of individualism. The ideas espoused by these men establish a theory of society in which ” there is no other way toward an understanding  of social phenomena but through our understanding of individual actions directed toward other people and guided by their expected behavior.” In other words, it is a theory of society, that sees the individual actor as paramount. (It is interesting to note that this is in stark contrast to a common criticism that individualism sees men as isolated individuals, best understood without the context of society). To these philosophers, while human reason was interesting, and could play a role in individual decision making, it was neither paramount or necessary to their theory of society. In fact, they argued that the greatest institutions of man were mostly created spontaneously from the interactions of independent actors, creating a system greater than the designs of those participating in it.

    In contrast, Hayek saw a “False” or “Rationalistic” individualism. This theory, espoused by continental philosophers like Rousseau, and the physiocrats, saw all discoverable order as the result of a Rational Mind. To them the individuals rationality was the pinnacle of humanity. Any system that was not rationally planned or designed was from the start inferior to a planned system. This system of thought, however almost always lead to the worst aspects of collectivism. Even today you can hear it’s echos in calls for Communism. An article in favor of “Disaster Communism”, has the author arguing “Climate change represents the biggest threat humanity has ever faced. Why does it seem that we cannot do anything about it? Because the productive forces we created are totally outside our rational control.”.

    This dumb fuck is arguing for communism, and talks about "Rationality"?!?
    If only we could know what he was thinking.

    Once he has cleared up and segregated these two competing forms of “Individualism”, Hayek is able to tussle with many common critiques and show why they are misplaced. I would, however be remiss to explain these here, and leave their discovery as an exercise for you to read.

     

    This Article is a fantastic primer for anyone who may be amiable to libertarian thought, but is not so simplistic as to be overlooked by those who are already on board. It is fairly simple, and does not dive into any deep economic concepts that could be confusing. Recommended age: 17 +. The rest of his book is very good as well, though can get a bit technical and dry at times.

    Four, half, rating, ratings, star icon
    4.5 / 5
  • Chapter 15 – The Stay

    “Well, if they’re going to issue the stay at all, now would be a good time! I mean, if no stay today, by tomorrow night my guy is eating with the big metal spoon, if you know what I mean.” I’m on the phone to appellate defense in Washington, D.C. I look at my watch. The digital face reads 00:31. Ten-thirty in the morning east coast time.

    “Alright, bye.” I hang up. I’m looking at documents, but I’m not really seeing anything – David Ponder’s record book, letter from his wife, character statements, and I’m trying to imagine how I’m going to defend him tomorrow. I’ve got one last motion that I’ll bring at the close of the government’s case. One last grasp that has a sound basis in law, but the judge will deny it, at this point. It’s a technicality.

    From the beginning I’ve had the sense that they have mischarged the offense, perhaps intentionally. The prosecution has charged it as willful disobedience of a superior commissioned officer. Under the UCMJ, that has a stiffer penalty than the more general charge of violating a lawful general order, such as the order from the Secretary of Defense, to take the anthrax shot. The government has charged it as violating the specific Navy Lieutenant’s order, but there is an old case that stands for the proposition that merely repeating a higher order can not make an orders violation the more egregious willful disobedience of a superior commissioned officer. It is called the “ultimate offense doctrine,” but it probably isn’t going to work. Nothing else has.

    I’m tired. I haven’t slept much, I need a shave, and my back is killing me from my tiny desk chair at home and my broken desk chair at work. I need to get David’s sentencing case together, review my opening statement and closing argument, and make sure all of the documents are in my case file, with necessary copies for each of the jurors…

    My head nods and I realize I’ve drifted off at my desk. I look at my watch and see it’s 2:33 am. I rub my face and decide to take a walk.

    The building is dark and empty, except for me and the feisty Okinawan cockroaches. I stroll the dark corridors, my sneakers making a light tread on the tile. I stretch my arms over my head as I walk to the entrance. Out the window, the open field beside our building is dark. I can barely see the slope that I know rises up to a road that runs next to the next set of office buildings and the barracks.

    I hear the phone in the clerk’s office ring, but there’s nothing particularly unusual about that at this hour because of the time difference; people frequently fax documents from the States during our nighttime in Okinawa. The fax ticks away, a counterpoint to the flying bugs banging into the glass on the door and the light just outside of it. Tick-tick-tick. In seven hours, David Ponder is going to be facing a jury, and likely going to jail. Unless that fax. . .

    I walk hurriedly to the defense clerk’s office and go to the fax machine behind the clerk’s desk. Letter-sized sheets are spitting out, face down. I grab one and flip it over to see if it has anything to do with me. The cover sheet is from the Washington Navy Yard. I grab the whole stack while more keep sliding out.

    My eyes flick over the words.

    “YEAHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!” I let out a guttural yell that echoes throughout the empty building. “Can you feel that, huh!?! Baby, can ya’!?” My best Ace Ventura, hips thrusting, fist pumping. I want to cry with relief. We beat the clock by seven hours. I’ve kept my promise to David and his wife, to Jason Stonewall, and Vittolino Arroyo. We have a stay from the Navy Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals. No one’s going to jail tomorrow.

                                                                                                                                                                           

    I take my time packing up and make a few copies of the stay. Before I leave, somewhere near 3 am, I take a ten-penny nail and hammer the stay to the prosecution’s office door. I don’t do it right through the middle, however, because I’m still a Marine Officer and someone might bitch to the CO about a nail in the door. I hammer the nail just deep enough to look like someone was careless; but not all the way through the door, for example. I also place the nail an inch or two above the middle of the sheet, close enough to the top of the sheet that it doesn’t look like it was intentionally in the middle, but far enough down that someone will have to either rip the paper in half to get it off or pry out the nail. It’s an asshole move, to be certain, but I know it might be all the satisfaction I’m going to get in the long run, so I indulge myself. It’s the little “fuck yous” that matter in life. It won’t be the last laugh, but it’s enough to make me smile as I walk to my car for the drive back to Kadena Air Base officer housing and my wife and four daughters.

  • Chapter 14 – Secretary Cohen’s “Four Points”

    In December of 1997, the anthrax vaccine manufacturer was shut down and could not manufacture anything related to the AVA. Notwithstanding that hurdle, Secretary of Defense William Cohen announced that before the mandatory program would begin, it would have to meet four prerequisites:

    1. Supplemental testing, consistent with Food and Drug Administration standards, to assure sterility, safety, potency and purity of the vaccine;
    2. Implementation of a system for fully tracking personnel who receive the anthrax vaccinations;
    3. Approval of appropriate operational plans to administer the immunizations and communications plans to inform military personnel of the overall program;
    4. Review of health and medical issues of the program by an independent expert.

    (My emphasis added). One cannot help but wonder why condition number one would need to be in place if the DoD was confident in the safety and potency of the AVA, as it had started saying publicly. In fact, this appears to have been nothing more than a media campaign to assuage fears because none of these four “prerequisites” were ever met before the program kicked off, which is exactly why the manufacturer had been shut down in the first instance. Each of these factors revealed fundamental flaws with the program from its inception.

    With regard to point 1, “supplemental testing” may well have been the worst idea for the DoD could have ever come up with because what it demonstrated, unequivocally, was failure of lot, after lot, after lot of the vaccine.[1] One of the first findings in CBER’s February 1998 inspection was that “there is no validation of the length of time sublots are held until they are used in a lot. Sublots have been held longer than three years prior to use. There is no stability data to support this hold time.”[i] Lest this seem picayune, consider a little more history of one particular Sublot:

    Sublot AV456 was produced . . . in 5/95 [and stored] until 3/97 at which time it was transported to the formulation room . . . with other sublots to make FAV039. Here it was discovered that AV456 was contaminated with mold, and it was destroyed.[ii]

    While some may say that the fact that it was caught is good news, it ignores the other, older sublots where mold or other impurities were not caught. One finding (among many like this) is particularly noteworthy:

    Lot FAV023 was filled on 12/13/93 and passed a potency test on 3/29/94. It was submitted for redating on 4/2/97 and was placed in the stability program (zero time) at the same time. It is reported as failing potency on 4/2/97. It was tested again on 8/12/97 and is reported as failing potency. A fourth potency test conducted on 10/6/97 is listed as passing by 0.01. There is no investigation into the original result and justifying the additional testing.[iii]

    This finding is most disturbing because it indicates a testing regime that ignores negative test results – twice! – and somehow chooses to validate a subsequent positive after two negatives. How can one know which test result is correct with two failing and two passing results? And how many people would like to line up, roll up their sleeve, and take their shots from that particular vial of the vaccine? Stability testing of biological products is crucial because of the possibility for these products to break down over time. Note that this lot was “filled” in 1993. Four years later it passes a test by .01 after having failed twice previously. This particular finding is in no way isolated: Lots FAV 010, 011, 018, 021, 022, 025, 028, 040, 041, 042, 043, and 044 all had at least one failed potency test that was not investigated and then a passing result was somehow chosen over the negative one.

    FAV016 has its own uniquely disturbing history.

    Lot FAV016 had 6579 vials rejected due to particulates during post-filling inspection. These particulates were not identified, nor was an investigation conducted. The batch was released.

    Someone, somewhere, had unidentified “particulates” injected into them. As a practical aside, one has to wonder how those individuals will get VA compensation if they have an illness as a result of this contaminated product being injected into them in light of the DoD’s positions that there had only been 74 adverse events from the vaccine.

    The list of violations goes on and on and includes several different lots being tested and found with such contaminants as “penicillum species” – a danger to anyone allergic to penicillin; cladosporium – a fungus that can cause infections leading to “rough skin, black lesions on the hands, and sometimes a brain abscess”; altenaria – a fungus that can cause dermatitis in humans; micrococcus – a contaminant that is relatively harmless to humans; staphylococcus saprophyticus – a significant cause of urinary tract infections; staphylococcus epidermis – a significant cause of opportunistic infections, usually for those with some skin puncturing, such as needle/IV intrusions, medical appliances, or surgery; and staphylococcus capitis – another infection causing bacteria.

    Despite all of these findings and more in February of 1998, the program was launched on May 15, 1998, with Secretary Cohen claiming, with a straight face, that “all conditions for implementing the anthrax vaccination program for the total force have now been met.”[iv] There is simply no possible way Secretary Cohen could have said that in good conscience if he was aware of the inspection results in February. And given everything going on around the program, it is impossible to imagine that he didn’t know – because he manufacturer “voluntarily” shut down for “renovations” in January 1998. In reality it shut down as a result of the Notice of Intent to Revoke letter by the FDA, otherwise the February inspection results would have resulted in the facility’s license revocation.

    The second condition of the program was tracking of immunizations. Two DoD briefers talked extensively on November 6th, 1997, about a new program that would be used to track immunizations and of the terrific job the new system had done in Bosnia.[v] At a March 1998 Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, however, Dr. Randolph Wykoff, the Associate Commissioner for operations at the FDA, and Mark Gebicke of the GAO, pointed out that the Bosnia experience left a lot to be desired, particularly of the tracking of immunizations under an IND protocol for an investigational encephalitis vaccine.[vi] In fact, one report used the word “abysmal” to describe it.[vii] Once again, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs promised to get better, but also talked about a new procedure for getting relief from the FDA from the requirements of an IND.  The FDA associate director maintained that the “FDA firmly believes the IND process, as defined in our rules and regulations, is sufficiently flexible [for DoD’s needs]. Additionally, FDA is convinced the Department of Defense has the scientific, clinical, and logistic capability necessary to comply with the requirements of the IND process.”[viii] Evidently, however, they could not and did not do it in Bosnia. A GAO report issued the same day stressed the importance of being able to track vaccine immunizations in order to ensure “that (1) sufficient supplies of vaccines will be available at the various worldwide immunization sites; (2) vaccines that are older than their 1-year shelf life are destroyed; and (3) records of vaccines received, administered, and destroyed are kept to allow for monitoring and tracking.”[ix] Worse yet, the GAO found that during the “Bosnia deployment in 1997 . . . DOD could not account for more than 3,000 (20 percent) of the total number of doses sent to Bosnia.”[x]

    Requirement number three was that there would be approved operational plans to communicate to service members about the anthrax vaccine program. Whatever the operational plans were, in May 1999, the Department of the Air Force circulated a memo to its judge advocates, specifically defense counsel, telling them that “a small number of military members have refused to follow their commander’s direct order to take the [anthrax] vaccine” and that the cause of their fear in taking the shot is “misinformation obtained from web sites set up by special interest groups[.]”[xi] This was a frequent refrain of the DoD, in front of Congress and in the press. The memo also points members to the DoD’s own website, which was established after the program had begun, in order to “counter” in DoD parlance “internet misinformation.” Evidently then, in March of 1998, when the program was about to begin, prong number three hadn’t been met, either.

    It is worth noting that the Army’s AVIP Agency existed solely for the promotion of the anthrax vaccine. It was budgeted at $74 million over a six-year period (FY99-FY05).[xii] No other military medicine program has ever needed to be forced on servicemembers with an orchestrated campaign of this type. William Arkin, a defense writer and former Army intelligence officer observed that “. . . this is the Pentagon versus its own service members. It is a depressing window into the breakdown of discipline and basic confidence in the political and military leadership. That has nothing to do with the Web.”[xiii]

    Criterion number four probably cost the DoD as much credibility (if one can say it had any to begin with) as number one. It would be comical were it not for the stakes involved. Secretary of Defense Cohen announced that there would be a “review of the health and medical aspects of the program by an independent expert.”[xiv]

    Doctor Gerard N. Burrow was the doctor who allegedly reviewed the program at the request of Deputy Secretary of Defense Rudy DeLeon. Dr. Burrow concluded that “[t]he anthrax vaccine appears to be safe and offers the best available protection against wild-type anthrax as a biological warfare agent.”[xv] Unfortunately, Dr. Burrow is a professor of gynecology at Yale University School of Medicine, a specialty that one would not normally associate with some expertise in weaponized anthrax toxins. When that unfortunate snippet from his CV leaked out, Dr. Burrow was subsequently asked by Congress to testify about his review at a 29 Apr 1999 hearing. He declined to appear. Instead, in a 26 Apr 1999 letter to Representative Christopher Shays (R-CT), Burrow stated that

    “[t]he Defense Department was looking for some [sic] to review the program in general and make suggestions, and I accepted out of patriotism. I was very clear that I had no expertise in Anthrax and they were very clear they were looking for a general oversight of the vaccination program.”[xvi]

    The DoD’s claims of misinformation on the internet had a particularly hollow ring in light of its blatant lack of honesty and candor in having something as simple as an independent review conducted. Nothing was ever done about this lie that was foisted off on American servicemembers. No one has ever been taken to task for this laughably blatant fraud perpetrated on U.S. military members and the broader American public.

    Thus, in the end, the DoD’s four-point plan to reassure the public and servicemembers of the safety of the anthrax program – as a prerequisite to beginning inoculation – was nothing more than a PR campaign that ultimately cost the DoD credibility that it did not have to spare. As the truth came out, and was certainly made available on the internet and elsewhere, the DoD’s cries of “misinformation” went unheeded. Service members on active duty and in the reserves began to refuse or leave the service rather than take the anthrax shot.

    If the DoD’s actions appear incredible, the FDA’s inaction is equally baffling.  The FDA is charged, under the Administrative Procedures Act, with the duty and authority to regulate, among many other things, the safety of drugs and biologic products. The FDA has had no hesitation in cracking down on manufacturers who do not comply with its regulations or decisions. The cases in the D.C circuit are legion with the FDA disciplining manufacturers who try to market a drug for a purpose not clearly delineated on the approved labeling or who otherwise fail to comply with IND protocols.[xvii] For some reason, however, in the case of the AVA, the FDA had an absolutely incestuous relationship with the DoD, a third-party who was NOT even the manufacturer! Letters were exchanged between the two agencies regarding non-compliance with IND protocols after the IND protocol was not properly administered in Bosnia. At the March 17, 1998, hearing, the following colloquy took place on this issue between Senator Rockefeller and Dr. Wykoff, the FDA’s associate director for operations.

    Rockefeller:  . . . It’s also not clear to me that FDA’s shoes are entirely clear or clean on this matter. In fact, some would say lax.  I think that FDA and DoD have been exchanging letters about all of this for some months now. And the fact is that seven years after the Gulf War, the situation is still not resolved. If DoD does not adequately answer FDA’s questions with respect to these matters and others, what is FDA going to do about it?  . . . And why, for example, was it necessary for the Presidential Advisory Commission to address the waived informed consent matter six years after the end of the war? So I put to you what FDA would recommend and would do if DoD does not come in compliance more?

    Wykoff:  . . . We have tried very hard to make sure that they are absolutely clear what our rules and regulations are and what our expectations are. We believe that they understand that. We believe that they have the capability of complying with all of our IND rules and regulations. As to whether they will comply in the next deployment situation, obviously we can’t predict that.

    Rockefeller: And if they don’t, is there anything that you can do about it?

    Wykoff: Yes, sir. Obviously, there are a range of options that we have. We would have to determine what the specific concerns are. That drives what are specific actions would be.

    Rockefeller: What are some of the options?

    Wykoff: Well, as we interact with any trial sponsor, we learn more about their ability to conduct IND trials, we would be more or less willing to grant waivers or exemptions to particular requirements.  We could hold them to more – all of the requirements as outlined in the rules and regulations – based on their performance.[xviii]

    It boggles the mind to think that the first words out of the FDA’s mouth are talk of waivers for non-compliance with regulations, particularly in light of DoD’s history in this area. There was, and is, a clearly documented squeamishness on the part of the FDA to step in and bring the DoD into compliance. In downright shocking testimony before a House Committee, Dr. Kathryn Zoon of CBER was questioned by Rep. Christopher Shays (R-CT) about the FDA’s regulatory responsibility.

    ZOON: This is a licensed vaccine. If a physician uses it or DoD uses it, that does not really fall under our jurisdiction.

    SHAYS: So it’s your statement before us now that if DoD doesn’t abide by the protocol, you have no responsibility? That you have set out a requirement? Who is responsible then? Who’s going to make sure that DoD abides by the protocol, if you don’t do it?

    ZOON: We don’t have the authority.

    SHAYS: I can’t believe – I just want to say, Dr. Zoon, I cannot believe that you have just said under oath that you do not have the responsibility to deal with this issue or the authority. You said you don’t have the authority.

    ZOON: I said – yes, that’s correct.

    SHAYS: That is your testimony.

    ZOON: We don’t have the authority.

    SHAYS: Well then who is going to protect our men and women if you aren’t going to do it? Who? Who has the authority?

    The tricky part of this testimony is that it is partly correct. The FDA does not regulate end-users of a product, normally. That is, they do not tell an individual doctor, for example, that he cannot use a drug off-label. Two important caveats to that “normal” example, however. First, the normal patient can’t and isn’t being compelled by their doctor to take anything; they can decline, and they can also sue if something happens as a result of the doctor’s malpractice. A military member has neither of those options. Second, and more directly on point, if the end-user is participating in a clinical protocol, then the FDA does regulate that user. Thus, the DoD’s participation in BioPort’s IND application in order to get an indication against aerosolized anthrax should make them subject to FDA regulation, just as the DoD was during the Gulf War when applying for a Rule 23(d) waiver. FDA’s willingness to accede to DoD’s interpretation essentially allowed the DoD to completely slide on their responsibilities. Some lawyer’s or regulator’s intentional misinterpretation of the FDA’s own regulations resulted in an open abdication of the FDA’s regulatory role over the AVA.

    FDA officials have repeatedly acceded to DoD doctors’ interpretations of the anthrax vaccine label, as well. This is an absurdity, particularly appalling in light of the DoD’s involvement in the manufacturing process. The DoD fundamentally became a manufacturer, for all intents and purposes, and the FDA looked the other way, hiding behind the fiction that the DoD was an “end-user” when convenient. The DoD was involved from the very beginning in the development of the anthrax vaccine. Additionally, when problems arose with the manufacturer, the DoD sent in its own ‘inspection’ teams to ensure the supply of the vaccine. The DoD had paramount liens on every piece of equipment that the manufacturer has. A GAO report in June 1999 found that

    DOD has made a significant investment in renovating BioPort’s biologic facility to meet the military’s requirements for anthrax vaccine . . . Since 1988, DOD has provided about $112 million in contracts, including options, to help ensure the viability of the anthrax vaccine biologic facility. As shown in figure 1, DoD’s contracts provided monies to (1) produce the vaccine, (2) renovate and expand the production facility, (3) provide various support services, and (4) purchase equipment to enhance production capacity. DoD has also provided contract terms and conditions to help ensure the success of the anthrax vaccine program. For example, under Public Law 85-804, which allows for government indemnification of contractors for unusually hazardous risks, DoD indemnified BioPort against product liability. In addition, DoD agreed to allow the company to sell up to 200,000 doses of anthrax vaccine to others, using government-furnished equipment rent-free, after DoD’s requirements are met.[xix]

    Amazingly, this is chump change compared to what the Defense Contract Auditing Agency found in 2000! That report led to an Inspector General Investigation. Notwithstanding numerous audits that found that the company was not financially viable, BioPort requested contract amendments that included $1.28 million in bonuses for senior management that amounted to 109% of the managers’ base salary. This was deemed an “unreasonable expenditure” by the DCAA in light of “BioPort’s current financial condition.”[xx] Okay, so someone disapproved, right? Well, sort of, because the manufacturer had almost no real financial incentive to produce an FDA approved vaccine under its contracts with DoD to begin with: the contract paid the manufacturer 90% of the contract price before the FDA ever inspected the vaccine. Yes, read that again.

    Put another way, BioPort only got paid 10% more for the product being approved by the FDA. At one point, the Department of Justice was looking into criminal charges as some $6 to $8 Million of the money provided to the manufacturer was unaccounted for.  Additionally, the fact the former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral William Crowe was a co-owner of the facility, as well as Dr. Robert Myers, (formerly of MDPH and MBPI) can hardly escape attention. Crowe was the first senior military officer to have come out publicly in support of then-Democratic party candidate for the Presidency, Arkansas governor Bill Clinton. While both Crowe and Myers disavowed any “inside” preferential treatment from the DoD, one must wonder if the decision to award BioPort the contract had anything to do with either’s presence as an owner. Finally, emails from inside the DoD suggest that the agency actually had its own people “on site.” During hearings held by Representative Christopher Shays in May 1999, an email was sent from Brigadier General Eddie Cain, the Director of the Joint Program Office for Biological Defense, to an Army Colonel John V. Wade. In the email Cain warned that “[I]f you think Congressman Shays was critical of the current relationship between FDA & DOD, wait until he finds out that DOD is calling the shots on-sight.” [sic][xxi] When this email surfaced during the court-martial of Air Force Captain (and medical Doctor) John Buck, the FDA had “no comment.”

    The FDA has, for whatever reasons, backed down from the DoD to the point that after the warning letters, the notice of intent to revoke, and a failed inspection thereafter, the agency still withheld pulling the manufacturer’s license because the DoD interceded on behalf of the company. In a June 25, 2000, interview with the Vancouver newspaper The Province, Mark Elengold, the Deputy Director for CBER, explained what happened.

    The FDA held off pulling the licence, in part because it would have left the U.S. Department of Defence [sic] – which had just announced that all soldiers were to receive anthrax vaccine – with no domestic source.

    “This is a one-source product so we tend to try to work with firms and put additional monitoring steps in to avoid revoking the licence,” said Elengold.  The prestigious British medical journal Lancet reported at the time that ‘a plea from the Pentagon has prevented an ‘eleventh-hour’ closure of the only U.S. producer of anthrax vaccine,” according to an e-mail to DND [DOD?] medical headquarters in February 1998.

    Elengold confirmed the Pentagon sat in on a crucial call to the company in which he discussed revoking the licence.”[xxii]

    Electronic mails surfaced in and around 2000 show not only did the DoD convince the FDA not to revoke the license, but DoD also attempted to bully both the manufacturer and the Government Accounting Office at the same time. In one e-mail, a Pentagon official discusses how other agency supervisors were urging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the manufacturer of the vaccine to release lots that had been held up for scrutiny by them (the FDA). This despite Secretary Cohen’s public insistence on supplemental testing to ensure safety of the vaccine, one should remember.

    On Feb. 22. 1999, Dr. Michael Gilbreath, a civilian Pentagon biological defense employee sent an email to U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Eddie Cain, then Director of the Joint Program Office of Biological Defense (JPOBD). Gilbreath wrote that he had “received information this morning from BioPort that individuals within the DOD contacted them and threatened that DOD would circumvent BioPort and contact the FDA regarding availability of anthrax vaccine lots currently under review at the FDA . . . Any such actions by DOD would be inappropriate.”[xxiii]

    E-mails also reveal that the Pentagon was having trouble countering the U.S. General Accounting Office’s assertion that the vaccine is improperly licensed, and that it has not been proven safe and effective. Cain indicated in one e-mail that then Secretary of Defense William Cohen would be writing to the GAO, whose findings have consistently gone against the Pentagon, to protest “the expertise put on this (vaccine) project” by the watchdog agency.

    “If we cannot answer these questions, we (DOD and the Administration) are in big time trouble,” Cain said in the May 3 e-mail. “…We are digging ourselves a hole that will be too difficult to crawl out of.”[xxiv]

    The FDA also stood by when adulterated vaccine was shipped to the Canadian military and when 59 Marines were given shots from expired lots of the vaccine.[xxv] The FDA’s complicity with the DoD’s actions has left service members with no recourse but to either take the shot, be court-martialed for refusing, or leave the service somehow if their commitment allows it. If the service member simply will not take the chance on the vaccine’s safety, the penalty for refusing is court-martial with a certain conviction. Military Judges simply would not hear that the vaccine is investigational, nor would they even allow service members to present that information to a jury. The FDA’s refusal to act leaves the judge with an out: if the FDA thought it was investigational, why wouldn’t they just issue an opinion to that effect? Worse yet, some military judges would not wade through the necessary materials in order to understand the FDA regulatory process and what an IND is, or they would find that the Secretary of Defense’s actions were in legal parlance “non-justiciable” disputes between “co-equal branches of government.”

    The member who fights will be convicted and punished. When an Air Force Doctor, John Buck, tried to submit evidence that the specific lot that he was to have received, FAV044, was subject to a recall because it was expired, the judge did not allow the evidence to come into court. The only option left for service members was to resign quietly, leave at the end of a service obligation, or fight behind the scenes to ensure that the law is followed. That is what a group of persistent officers had been doing from the word go.

    Endnotes

    [1] It would take up too much space to detail all of the failed lots, for their various reasons during the February 20, 1998, CBER inspection on the lots of AVA. Some of the more egregious violations are listed. See CBER Inspection report dtd 2/20/98 for a complete listing.

    [i] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations Feb. 4-20, 1998.

    [ii] Id.

    [iii] Id.

    [iv] May 15, 1998, SecDef memo.

    [v] Nov 6, 1997, background briefing

    [vi] Mar 17, 1998 Senate Hearing, Committee on Veterans Affairs Holds Hearing on the Nomination of Togo West as Secretary of Veterans Affairs and on U.S. Biologic Vaccines for Gulf War Veterans.

    [vii] “Abysmal” tracking job quote ????

    [viii] Id.

    [ix] GAO Report T–NSIAD-98-83 p.8 (March 17, 1998).

    [x] Id.

    [xi] 18 May 99 AF memo

    [xii] Charles Cragin, PDASD Reserve Affairs, testimony, 3 Oct 2000.  See: http://www.house.gov/reform/hearings/healthcare/00.10.03/cragin.htm

    [xiii] William Arkin, “Bugged by the Net”, Washington Post online, 27 Sep 1999.  See: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/national/dotmil/arkin092799.htm

    [xiv] AVIP Impl ltr 18 May 98

    [xv]  See: http://www.defenselink.mil/other_info/burrows.html

    [xvi] Id.

    [xvii]

    [xviii] Mar 17, 1998 Senate Hearing, Committee on Veterans Affairs Holds Hearing on the Nomination of Togo West as Secretary of Veterans Affairs and on U.S. Biologic Vaccines for Gulf War Veterans.

    [xix] GAO Report GAO T-NSIAD-99-214,  (June 30, 1999)

    [xx] IG Report dtd March 22, 2000.

    [xxi] Dave Eberhart, Stars and Stripes.  May, 2001.

    [xxii] Ann Rees, “Their Dangerous Dose”, The Province [Vancouver, Canada], 25 Jun 2000

    [xxiii] E-mails Suggest Pentagon Pressured FDA On Anthrax Vaccine, Thomas D. Williams, Hartford Courant, May 17, 2001.

    [xxiv] Id.

    [xxv] See Most Dangerous Dose (Canadian article on vaccine) and GAO report on Marines T-NSIAD-00-36.

  • Chapter 12: The DoD “Evolves” on the Anthrax Vaccine

    Mary PENDERGAST (FDA):  As I indicated to you, it was not the type or quantity of information we would have hoped for.

    SHAYS (R-CT): That’s an understatement.

    PENDERGAST: It – it was.  We don’t disagree with you. This was war. This was the first time, and it didn’t work particularly well. We are in full agreement with you on that.

    SHAYS: This isn’t the first time the military has conducted themselves this way. And as long as they know the FDA’s going to be a paper tiger with the military, they will continue to do this. They will continue to basically say, bug off. And . . . as far as I’m concerned, that’s what they’ve said, and that’s what you’ve accepted. . .

    . . . And so we’re going to pursue this with the FDA, because in my judgment, the FDA allowed the military to do what they have to do in time of war, to have gotten a waiver from informed consent. They should have required that the troops technically, not just in spirit, be notified. And they should have made sure that it was being enforced . . . and [it’s] an outrage that it was not kept and data was not kept.

    And the FDA has not, in fact, really overseen this . . . And frankly, if you had said to me, we really blew it, just like the military, I could accept it. But you’re defending it, so now we’re going to pursue it.

    During the hearings on the Nixon impeachment, Senator Howard Baker (R-TN) asked the now famous question: “What did the President know and when did he know it?”[i] This same question is equally applicable to both FDA and DoD officials regarding the anthrax vaccine program. There has been a startling lack of candor and double-speak from both of these government agencies. While some of this could be attributed to normal bureaucrat-ese inside the Beltway, the level to which it has risen with this particular program goes so far beyond the “norm” as to be risible – and imputes far less honorable motives to those involved.

    _______________________________________________________

    In 1985, at the same time that the FDA’s panel was preparing its review on the anthrax vaccine, the Army had conducted its own review and sent out a Request for Proposals (RFP) for a contract to develop a new anthrax vaccine. The purpose of the RFP was to solicit manufacturers for their willingness to enter into a contract to create a new anthrax vaccine and the stated justification for fielding such a vaccine was that “[t]here is an operational requirement to develop a safe and effective product which will protect US troops against exposure from virulent strains of Bacillus anthracis.” This would seem to be a fairly straightforward proposition, but it immediately raises the question: why would the Army need a new vaccine, in light of the existing AVA? The Army RFP explains it quite simply:

    There is no vaccine in current use which will safely and effectively protect military personnel against exposure to this hazardous bacterial agent.[ii]

    In light of later DoD statements already examined and the ongoing program, it seems rather incredible that the Army announced in 1985, when there was only one existing license for anthrax vaccine (as there has been since the AVA was fist developed), that no vaccine in current use was safe or was effective – the two fundamental legal requirements for licensure by the FDA – safety and efficacy.

    The RFP singles out MBPI’s anthrax vaccine, noting that there is “a licensed vaccine against anthrax, which appears to afford some protection from the disease . . . [but]  [t]he vaccine is . . . highly reactogenic, requires multiple boosters to maintain immunity, and may not be protective against all strains of the anthrax bacillus.”[iii] Now, contrast this with statements by Dr. Kathryn Zoon of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), who claimed in Congressional testimony in 1999 of the same exact vaccine that “to our knowledge . . . the vaccine that we are using protects against all known natural strains of anthrax.”[iv] She is either completely misinformed or lying. Setting that aside for the moment, what is even more troubling – and revealing – about her statement is that Dr. Zoon, a member of the FDA, the agency that is supposed to regulate Biologics, refers to the vaccine as one that “we are using[!]” Dr. Zoon is a senior government official in the Division that is supposed to regulate the safety of vaccines and monitor compliance with Good Manufacturing Practices.

    In this same hearing, Dr. Zoon dismissed the previous Notice of Intent to Revoke (NOIR) letter given to MBPI by her own Agency as if it were a minor matter. When asked directly “what the most serious problems are with the manufacturing of the vaccine and whether the manufacturer is taking steps to remedy those problems” Dr. Zoon replied that “. . . the manufacturer has had a notice of an intent to revoke. There were GMP deficiencies, and the manufacturer is currently engage in remedying those deficiencies.”[v] This is from the head of an agency that has found continuous and repeated cGMP violations, to such an extent that the Agency has called the manufacturing process “not validated,” had issued an NOIR which led to a “voluntary” shutdown of the entire facility just 20 months prior, had found that when the FDA was not notified that “[o]n 6/30/98, the firm installed a new reaction tank mixer on Tank (redacted).” Finally, one month after Dr. Zoon is telling Congress that this vaccine works against all known strains of anthrax, in November, 1999, the FDA inspectors would find again that “[t]he manufacturing process for Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed is not validated.”[vi]

    In 1989 the DoD actually defended its position that the (then)-current vaccines were not good enough for mass troop inoculation. A DoD letter to Senator John Glenn of the Senate Committee on Government Affairs from Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert Barker proffered that “[c]urrent vaccines, particularly the anthrax vaccine, do not readily lend themselves to use in mass troop immunization for a variety of reasons: the requirement in many cases for multiple immunizations to accomplish protective immunity, a higher than desirable rate of reactogenicity, and, in some cases, lack of strong enough efficacy against infection by the aerosol route of exposure.”[vii] This can be contrasted with Dr. Sue Bailey’s claims on behalf of the DoD in 1999 that “[t]he vaccine . . . is effective and has an incredibly safe record. The evidence of vaccine effectiveness against aerosol exposure to anthrax is very persuasive.”[viii] Dr. Bailey was the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs. She also offered that “[w]e have a vaccine that can protect our troops from this deadly weapon. It would be irresponsible for us to deploy our servicemen and women without using this safe and efficacious vaccine.”[ix] Evidently, the same exact vaccine, which in the intervening ten years had failed almost every conceivable FDA inspection for sterility and purity and potency and quality, had managed to transform itself in the eyes of the DoD from being “highly reactogenic” in 1985 and again in 1989 and lacking in “effectiveness against aerosol exposure” to being an essential force protection measure against anthrax. The only comparable transformation for a liquid involves water, wine, and a Jewish carpenter.

    In March of 1990, two Army doctors, Col. Takafuji, of the Army Surgeon General office and Col. Philip K. Russell of Fort Detrick, Maryland, describe the anthrax vaccine as a “limited use vaccine  . . . unlicensed experimental vaccine.”[x] This is interesting because in the same year that two prominent Army doctors were calling the anthrax vaccine “unlicensed” and “experimental”, the DoD was arguing to the FDA that it didn’t need a Rule 50.23(d) waiver for anthrax – or any other drugs, actually, regardless of their status. This medical admission, however, appears to have been an aberration in the DoD’s medical community, or at least in its messaging. The more consistent opinion, from senior Army physicians was actually that the vaccine was unlicensed and potentially hazardous. In 1994, Major General Ronal Blanck, later the Army’s Surgeon General, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee about the anthrax vaccine as a possible cause of Gulf War Illness.

    Although anthrax vaccine had been considered approved prior to the Persian Gulf War, it was rarely used. Therefore, its safety, particularly when given to thousands of soldiers in conjunction with other vaccines, is not well established. Anthrax vaccine should continue to be considered as a potential cause for undiagnosed illnesses in Persian Gulf military personnel because many of the support troops received anthrax vaccine, and because the DoD believes that the incidence of undiagnosed illnesses in support troops may be higher than that in combat troops.[xi]

    This position was reiterated by Colonel Arthur Friedlander, the Army’s Chief anthrax vaccine researcher, in a chapter in a medical textbook, Plotkin’s Vaccines, stating that the anthrax vaccine was “unsatisfactory for several reasons.”[xii] Among these reasons were the high adverse reactions and the unknown “degree of purity” of the vaccine. The Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, after hearing Major General Blanck’s testimony and many others, found in its 1994 report that “the vaccine’s effectiveness against inhaled anthrax is unknown. Unfortunately, when anthrax is used as a biological weapon, it is likely to be aerosolized and thus inhaled. Therefore, the efficacy of the vaccine against biological warfare is unknown. . . . The vaccine should therefore be considered investigational when used as a protection against biological warfare.[xiii]

    By 1995, the DoD had, it appears, two plans in place to gain licensure for the anthrax vaccine as a pretreatment for a biological warfare attack. The U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) had “developed a new recombinant protective antigen vaccine against anthrax. This vaccine was successfully tested in experiments using animals but has not been tested on humans.”[xiv] USAMRIID officials stated that the testing on this new vaccine “would take about 3 years, and FDA approval of the manufacturing of the vaccine could take years longer.”[xv] Either this dissuaded the DoD from pursuing this approach or the DoD had a concurrent plan to approach MDPH to see what kind of arrangement could be made with respect to the existing vaccine. In light of the previous DoD articles, responses, letters and statements, it appears that the length of time to bring an updated, recombinant vaccine through the FDA approval process was unacceptable and the project was abandoned.[1] A House Committee attributed the DoD’s abandonment of the new generation vaccine to the time it would take to complete FDA approval, perhaps 6 to 8 years.[xvi] In 1999, the “DOD consider[ed] further development of this [new] vaccine candidate an unfunded requirement.”[xvii] One has to wonder if this new vaccine’s status had anything to do with fear of undermining the new anthrax program that was announced in 1997. The GAO and Congress both criticized the DoD for focusing “almost exclusively on the older, FDA approved vaccine, to the exclusion of development work on newer, recombinant vaccine formulations.”[xviii] Whatever the reasons,[2] in 1995, the DoD shifted its focus from developing a newer, better vaccine to amending the license for the existing vaccine.

    In September 1995, the DoD contracted with Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) to develop a plan to obtain FDA approval for use of the existing anthrax vaccine as a pretreatment for aerosol exposure to anthrax in a Biological Warfare (BW) environment. SAIC conducted an analysis and presented a plan to the Army that explained that there would be a significant informed consent obstacle to implementing this change in order to meet the regulatory requirements of the FDA and CBER. Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar (U.S. Army) explained the legal status of the vaccine to Dr. Robert Myers (MDPH) in quite simple terms:

    “This vaccine is not licensed for aerosol exposure expected in a biological warfare environment.”[xix]

    Here is incontrovertible evidence that DoD officials at significant levels were acutely aware of the legal status of the anthrax vaccine at least two years before the anthrax program was commenced. While this is damning, it is only so because of the subsequent DoD actions. At the time, however, it appeared that DoD was preparing to comply with the regulatory requirements for obtaining a change to the existing license in order to get an indication for use against inhalational (aerosol) anthrax exposure expected in the BW environment.

    In October 1995, the Joint Program Office for Biological Defense (JPOBD) held a meeting to develop a plan for obtaining the necessary FDA approval for amending the existing AVA license. The minutes from that meeting indicate that the Army knew it had two big problems in obtaining FDA approval of a new licensed indication for inhalation anthrax. First, the efficacy tests used to license the vaccine were for a different vaccine, the Merck vaccine used by the Brachman study rather than the MDPH vaccine. Second, there was no scientific data (the necessary two “well-controlled human studies”) to support this change by FDA. [xx] A meeting was held on 20 Oct 1995 to discuss the process for modifying the MDPH anthrax vaccine license for several purposes: to indicate a reduced number of injections, to include a different route of administration (intramuscularly as opposed to subcutaneous), and to expand the indication to include protection against aerosol challenge of spores. Col. Arthur Friedlander said that “the original series of 6 doses was established in the 1950’s for an anthrax vaccine similar to but not identical with the MDPH vaccine.”[xxi] The minutes also noted what had been commented on by the 1985 FDA panel review of the AVA: “Studies of vaccine (not MDPH product) effectiveness in humans working in tanneries showed protection against cutaneous disease, but there was insufficient data to demonstrate protection against inhalation disease.”[xxii]

    This meeting also portended the beginning of the public relations campaign for the anthrax vaccine. Prior to that, however, Brigadier General Busby, the Joint Program Manager for Biological Defense, stated that: “the DoD’s position is ‘soldiers are citizens first’ and whatever studies are formulated, they have to be done with this concept in mind. Soldiers have the same Constitutional rights as other citizens.” These comments may have been addressing one of the SAIC briefing slides at that meeting. The slide is entitled “Volunteer Considerations” and is a comparison of two groups for use in any studies to amend the license for the vaccine. It depicts two rows: on one side is “At-Risk Forces” and on the other is “Normal Volunteers.” There are bulleted points on either side, indicating pros and cons of using the two groups. The At-Risk Forces have in their favor, it would appear, that using them would serve “Dual Purpose[s]” – “Immunized (??) force” and “Study needs.”  However, on the down side, At-Risk forces have “Informed consent complications,” which include record keeping and “assignment issues,” probably referring to the frequent rotation of service members. “Normal” volunteers have the problem of availability, but once you have them, there is better “access for study needs and record keeping”. They also come with a “cost” and using them “doesn’t support immediate readiness needs.” Finally, the last point against using soldiers points out the DoD’s concerns with public relations from the beginning: “Soldier ‘guinea pigs’ criticism.”[xxiii] Whether BGen Busby had his mind changed on soldier’s rights by the brief or not, he made an odd pronouncement at a meeting on the license amendment for the vaccine. According to the minutes, he “addressed the need to make the case that anthrax is currently the principal biological warfare threat. By protecting against anthrax and other BW threats, the vaccines serve as a deterrent.”[xxiv] We do not have transcipts of those meetings and we don’t know how exactly he “addressed” this supposed “need,” but it is troubling on many levels because it is a sweeping statement justifying the use of vaccines against an invisible, perhaps even non-existent, threat. A cynical person might reasonably infer that the General is suggesting running a PR campaign on the American people to justify knowingly using an unlicensed vaccine. It is also odd because this is not a meeting of operational planners discussing the terrorist threat to U.S. Forces. These are doctors mostly, discussing how to get a license amendment for the anthrax vaccine and suddenly a one-star starts talking about the need to make a case for the vaccine as a BW deterrent. There is no discussion about the intelligence or evidentiary basis for such a conclusion, nor an explanation as to why military doctors would need to ‘make the case.’ One can imagine the hushed silence or, perhaps worse, the nodding heads, after the General makes that statement. Was this an implication that informed consent was to be side-stepped and patients were to be told that this was a great deterrent to anthrax attack? Was this to begin some media campaign to justify the use of this vaccine off-label?  Whatever it was, the idea of soldiers having the same rights as other citizens did not ultimately win out.

    In accordance with one of the decision tree slides from the 1995 briefing, the U.S. Army was supposed to help MDPH prepare an Investigational New Drug Application in an effort to amend the license for three reasons: (1) a new route of administration, (2) a reduced shot schedule (from 6 to 3), and (3) to obtain an indication against aerosolized anthrax. This IND application was pending with the FDA at the time of all of the courts-martials mentioned in the prior chapters. The importance of this application cannot be overstated. By law, that application becomes effective thirty days after it is submitted for the purposes set forth therein. This means that if someone administers the drug in accordance with the IND submission protocol, by definition and by law it is an investigational use of the drug. That IND was not withdrawn, modified, or otherwise dismissed by the FDA.

    If the above wasn’t enough to demonstrate conclusively the absurdity of the DoD position, consider this: the clinical protocol for this IND was being conducted at Fort Detrick, Maryland, a U.S. Army base; it was being run by DoD doctors and administrators; and the volunteers were U.S. Army soldiers. Amazingly, in the coup de gras, the soldiers in that study were given information about the anthrax vaccine, filled out and signed consent forms, and they were using the exact same vaccine that DoD was concurrently compelling regular troops to take under threat of court martial. The IND application was submitted following an Army, Joint Staff, and OSD staff process in which there was concurrence that it was necessary to obtain FDA approval of a new licensed indication for inhalation anthrax before DoD could start mass anthrax vaccinations.[xxv]

    For whatever reason, this consensus was reversed within a month of William Cohen’s confirmation in January of 1997 as Secretary of Defense. This followed significant DoD pressure on the FDA, much like in 1990 prior to the Gulf War, to get permission to begin use of the anthrax vaccine for inhalation anthrax without obtaining a new licensed indication or completing the scientific investigation proposed by the Army in the IND application.[xxvi] There were phone calls made, including one by Admiral Ed Martin, a U.S. Navy doctor and the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, looking for a new interpretation of the anthrax vaccine license, one different than the DoD’s long-standing position that the vaccine was not licensed for inhalational anthrax.

    Now (in 1997) the DoD wanted the FDA to say that the anthrax vaccine was licensed for such a use. On March 4, 1997, four days after the retirement of long-time FDA commissioner Dr. David Kessler, the man who had negotiated and required DoD to get a Rule 23(d) waiver on the verge of the Gulf War, Dr. Stephen Joseph, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, wrote to the acting FDA commissioner and stated that the “DoD has long interpreted the scope of the license to include inhalation exposure, including that which would occur in a biological warfare context.”[xxvii] Given what was already on the record by DoD officials, that statement cannot be spun any other way than as a bald-faced lie. In addition, Dr. Joseph asked “whether FDA has any objection to our interpretation of the scope of the licensure for the anthrax vaccine.” If Joseph’s assertion regarding the DoD’s position on the anthrax vaccine was correct and this belief was “long-standing”, then why would the DoD need to join in a clinical protocol and get an indication against aerosolized anthrax? Why did they even need to address that indication with the manufacturers? And why would the holder of the license, the maker of the vaccine, who presumably knows something about its own licenses and products, ask for an amendment to get the vaccine indicated for inhalational anthrax?  The answer is quite simple and mandated by the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act: it is because the AVA was never licensed for use against an aerosolized biological warfare attack.

    On March 13, 1997, acting FDA commissioner Dr. David Friedman abandoned the FDA’s regulatory role. He offered that “[w]hile there is a paucity of data regarding the effectiveness of Anthrax Vaccine for prevention of inhalation anthrax, the current package insert does not preclude this use . . . Therefore, I believe your interpretation is not inconsistent with the current label.”[xxviii] Notice that Friedman has now completely turned the law and FDA regulations – and the English language – completely on its head. The DoD now (apparently) had the green light it wanted and needed to go forward claiming that the vaccine was “FDA approved” for inhalational anthrax… Almost.

    There are obvious problems with these type of back-door, inter-office memos serving as policy statements of an agency: they circumvent the entire regulatory process. One person does not simply wave a magic wand and make a vaccine or drug licensed. Fortunately, enough people were apparently cognizant of the fact that outside entities might place undue reliance on the private informal opinion of FDA staff that the FDA drafted strict requirements for what it refers to as “advisory opinions” that might bind or commit the agency. 21 C.F.R. § 10.85(k) specifically states:

    a statement made or advice provided by an FDA employee constitutes an advisory opinion only if it is issued in writing under this Section. A statement or advice given by an FDA employee orally, or given in writing but not under this Section or §10.90 is an informal communication that represents the best judgment of that employee at that time but does not constitute an advisory opinion, does not necessarily represent the formal position of the FDA, and does not bind or otherwise obligate or commit the agency to the views expressed.[3]

    The above-mentioned “Friedman letter,” while consistently and extensively relied upon by the DoD as “proof” that the AVA was not an Investigational New Drug, was not issued under either of the required C.F.R sections. Accordingly, the letter is nothing more than an “informal communication” that has absolutely no legal effect. As such, the letter cannot modify the clearly defined legal status of the AVA that results from filing of the IND application by MBPI. What is even more bizarre about the DoD trying to solicit a favorable opinion about the AVA from the brand-new head of the FDA is that they are not even the manufacturer: they are a third party that wants to use it, but in no way does DoD have any ‘standing’ to do this where the company that makes the drug did not seek the FDA’s opinion on the vaccine’s status. This would be like Dow Chemical or Merck having an IND application for a drug pending before the FDA and then the American Medical Association steps in to ask the FDA to announce that the drug is actually not an IND, but licensed for the exact purpose that the drug’s own manufacturer is running a clinical testing protocol.

    The second reason that the letter is of no legal effect is that the Supreme Court had recently decided a similar case, Christensen, et al v. Harris Country, et al.[xxix] The Supreme Court specifically found that agency “personal opinion” letters are not entitled to deference by the Court, but only to “respect” – and then only to the extent that the letter’s interpretations are persuasive.[xxx] In this case, in light of the FDA regulations, Dr. Friedman’s letter is completely illogical because it rewrites the entire FDA regulatory scheme. His letter states that the DoD’s interpretation is “not inconsistent” with the approved labeling. This is nonsensical because drugs are designed, tested, and licensed for a specific purpose, not licensed for what’s on their label AND anything not inconsistent with that label. How could such be the case with the requirements for showing efficacy through two well-controlled human studies? In short, Dr. Friedman’s letter was worth little more than the combined total of the ink and paper with which it was written. Indeed, there could be no other result, given the fact that the letter is totally at odds with the IND application language of the manufacturer. It makes absolutely no sense to believe that an FDA official writing in his personal capacity can single-handedly invalidate the regulatory scheme adopted by the FDA to prevent the licensing and interstate movement of Investigational New Drugs at the request of some third party.

    What is truly mind-boggling about Dr. Friedman’s response is that just one week later, on March 20, 1997, CBER, the sub-agency of the FDA responsible for monitoring and inspecting the vaccine’s manufacturer, would issue the Notice of Intent to Revoke (NOIR) letter. To emphasize the recurring problems FDA had found at the manufacturer’s plant, the FDA letter stated:

    While these deviations were documented in the most recent inspection, we note that significant deviations have been documented during previous FDA inspections of May 4 through May 7,1993; May 31 through June 3, 1994; and April 24 through May 5, 1995. The seriousness of these deficiencies was emphasized to you in a letter dated December 22, 1993, and a Warning Letter dated August 31, 1995.[xxxi]

    To sum up, at the exact moment that the DoD is soliciting a favorable opinion/back-door approval from the head of the FDA for the AVA, the manufacturer is about to have its entire manufacturing process invalidated and threatened with having its license to manufacture the vaccine pulled by the results of FDA inspections. In an interview with the Canadian newspaper The Province, Mark Elengold, the Deputy Director for Operations at CBER, explained the significance of an NOIR letter. “. . . In the three years I have been in this job, I have done it about three times,” said Elengold. “It is a very serious tool. We view it . . . to be equivalent to an injunction . . . where we get a court to order compliance.”[xxxii] While the legal effect of Dr. Friedman’s letter is nil, it does make for great Public Relations and that’s exactly how the DoD would use the letter in seeking to win the PR battle that was about to begin. A number of interesting initiatives, press briefings, and press releases began not long after Dr. Joseph’s letter and Dr. Friedman’s response in March 1997.

    In retrospect, an overall pattern starts to emerge. There were several fronts on which the Secretary of Defense and the DoD tried to outdistance criticism of the program. The first claim was that the vaccine was “licensed.” This category had several sub-claims, such as long-term safety, use on veterinarians, and proven effectiveness of the AVA. The problem with these statements is, of course, their lack of completeness and/or their outright falsity. Some of these statements were well-beyond being just “spin.” As another example, at a background briefing on December 15, 1997, two senior defense officials laid out the upcoming anthrax vaccine immunization program (AVIP), noting that it was still six months away. There reporters asked some questions.

    Q:  The availability of the vaccine at this point, if you wanted to do a large program tomorrow, is there a stockpile of this vaccine available?

    A:  There’s a stockpile right now of seven million shots, which is about 1.2 TED – troop equivalent doses – of six shots, if you will. So there’s a large stockpile.

    A:  But that’s the stockpile . . .  We’re redoing the testing on it just to be absolutely certain before we go out. There’s been a great attention to safety in this.

    Q:  You found no impurities in the stockpile…

    A:  No.

    This answer came six months after the process for manufacture had been invalidated by CBER.

    The second area where the DoD attempted to promote the AVA harkens back to Brigadier General Busby’s statements at the meeting about the license amendment plan. There he talked about the need to “make the case” that anthrax was the number one biological threat. This was relatively easy to accomplish because anthrax is a real biological threat, but the DoD would engage in an unprecedented fear-mongering campaign in order to support the vaccine. Making it even easier were events in the headlines, such as Aum Shinryuko cult’s sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway, and the U.S. members of the U.N. inspection teams being forbidden from participating in Iraqi weapons’ inspections by Saddam Hussein. DoD briefers never missed an opportunity to point to the possibility of a terrorist attack on U.S. soil or to exaggerate the lethality of anthrax.[xxxiii] This is not to say that it is not lethal, but DoD briefers constantly called it “100% lethal,” which is a bizarrely hyperbolic claim. What does “one-hundred percent lethal” even mean? Does that mean everyone who breathes in even a molecule of anthrax spores? The answer to that is unequivocally “No.” What amount constitutes a lethal dose then? One briefer referred to 10,000 spores, while other DoD information refers to the LD50 as the number in thousands of spores that constitutes a lethal dose. The SecDef himself participated in this campaign with his then-famous quote during a live TV appearance with Cokie Roberts on ABC’s “This Week.” While holding a five pound bag of sugar, Cohen said that if “this was anthrax, it could wipe out half the population of Washington, D.C.”[xxxiv] One expert later called that “one of the most irresponsible statements ever made by a politician.”[xxxv] Additionally, Secretary of Defense Cohen gave several speeches about the proliferation of these weapons, exaggerating the number of countries capable of manufacturing and delivering such weapons. In three different speeches, Cohen put the number(s) of countries capable of weaponizing anthrax at 30, 25, and finally 10.[xxxvi]

    The final area of this media campaign was a kind of rhetorical fallback position, which consisted of a series of statements that can be summarized as “what else are we supposed to do?” The old “if it saves even one life” play. A number of high-ranking DoD officials made statements to the effect that they would be “derelict” if they didn’t give this vaccine in light of the threat, or that they were “morally obligated” to vaccinate soldiers, or that “it’s the best response” or “it’s the only response” that we have. These statements frequently relied upon the record of the individual making the statement as a testimonial to the vaccine’s necessity.

    The problem with all of this is that it ignores three critical aspects of immunizing people against their will. First, it ignores the law requiring informed consent. Second, it ignores the lack of efficacy for the claims being made in support of the anthrax vaccine. In other words, there had been no studies, and could never be ethically, proving the effectiveness of the vaccine against aerosolized anthrax. Even the animal studies, while promising, indicated a less than stellar performance against certain strains of the anthrax bacillus.[xxxvii] Finally, it completely elides the validity and viability of other (non-vaccine) treatments.

    There existed at the time a highly effective, fully licensed antibiotic with studies showing excellent success rates against anthrax if taken right after exposure. This has been a common military method of response to a number of other chemical agents, so there didn’t seem to be any explanation as to why the DoD couldn’t use these already licensed antibiotics in the event of an anthrax attack.[4] An illustration of the DoD’s refusal to consider other treatments occurred at the December 15th press briefing, when a reporter asked about other treatments against anthrax. The briefer’s answer:

    With regard to those medical countermeasures, antibiotics. They’re effective in sustaining service members until antibodies are built. Provides immediate protection, but it has to be sustained over a period of time, until the antibodies are developed. There are limited minor side effects with the dosage required of the antibiotics. Antiserum is a very fast reacting, immediately protection capability, but again, it’s limited, and it has to be re-administered to sustain protection. It’s expensive and the same minor side effects are associated with it.

    Vaccines are the way to go. It takes time to develop the immunity, but the immunity lasts for a long time. Limited, minor side effects. I think the rate of those folks that we’ve vaccinated over the last five years associated with their jobs — either lab workers, workers in industry in the private sector, special operations forces, there’s been about a 96-97 percent rate of no reaction at all, and those that did have had limited topical reactions, minor swelling or redness, things like that.

    It’s extremely difficult to circumvent a vaccine. This would ward against genetic engineering of other strains. Once that vaccine’s in, it takes a major effort for an unfriendly nation to try to develop another type of anthrax strain that we would have to dissect, if you will, figure out what it was and then rework our vaccine. But it is very effective. It provides the protection we need over the long haul.

    The briefer acknowledges the immediate nature of antibiotics and the long time necessary to develop immunity for vaccines, but offers that “vaccines are the way to go.” Additionally, probably most surprising, are the briefer’s references to the “minor reactions” (with a negative implication – “you’ve still got those minor reactions”) and the incredible claim of “96-97 percent no reaction at all” with the AVA, something that had never been true of the AVA. The briefer’s claims that the vaccine “would ward against genetic engineering” of other strains also had no evidence to support it. This makes the briefing read rather like an unsubstantiated point-by-point denial of the criticisms that had been levelled against the program. Either the briefer was unaware of BioPort’s problems, the DoD’s own studies on the highly reactogenic nature of the AVA, badly informed, or he was straight-up lying. With the DoD and this program, it is difficult to know which one.

    The DoD’s media campaign was fairly extensive, involving many briefings with the press in each of the above areas. For example, On April 16th, 1997, two senior defense officials gave a briefing on the DoD’s role in helping to train and “enhance the capability of federal, state, and local emergency response agencies to prevent and respond to domestic terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction.”[xxxviii] On April 25, 1997, a notice was sent to the press that the Marine Corps’ Chemical Biological Incident Response Force (CBIRF) would conduct “demonstrate its ability to effect consequence management following the simulated detonation of a chemical-biological terrorist device” in the Washington, D.C. area on April 30th. On April 28th, 1997, Secretary of Defense Cohen gave a speech at the University of Georgia, speaking at a conference on Terrorism, and told listeners that a rogue state attack using chemical-biological weapons was “not only plausible, it’s really quite real.”[xxxix] In fact, he told his audience that “about 30 countries now possess mature chemical and biological weapons programs with 12 having advanced missile capabilities.”[xl] Secretary Cohen emphasized a comprehensive response that included active and passive measures against such attacks. By November 1997, when U.S. members of the U.N. Inspection teams were not allowed by Saddam Hussein to participate in weapons’ inspections, anthrax and chemical-biological warfare (CBW) and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) were being talked about as imminent. There was November 14, 1997, briefing by a senior defense official on Iraq’s CBW capability.[xli] On related fronts, General Ronald Blanck, the Army’s Surgeon General, and Vice Admiral Dennis Blair, on November 6, 1997, were briefing the press on the DoD’s improved ability to track vaccine’s and medical health of service members.[xlii] This would of course be a crucial part of any DoD vaccine program because of its historically atrocious record (including in the Persian Gulf War), which has already been laid out in prior chapters.

    In sum, the DoD’s position on the AVA went from an open acknowledgment of the vaccine’s scientific and legal limitations in light of the vaccine’s history, to one of hyperbolic and straight-up false statements about its biological safety and efficacy and its legal status. This cannot be explained by bureaucratic turnover, or loss of institutional knowledge, because in many cases it involved the exact same people and agencies reversing their position within weeks, or even days, in some cases.

    Endnotes

    [1] Ironically, had this approach been taken, by 2002 the DoD would have had a new generation anthrax vaccine, presumably more effective and less reactogenic than the current vaccine, but more importantly, one actually licensed for its intended use. The quick fix did not turn out that way. A Congressional committee reached the same conclusion in 2000. See House Committee on Government Reform, 106 H. Rpt. 556.

    [2] I do offer some hypotheses and supporting evidence for them as to why the DoD changed courses in later chapters. It is for the reader to decide if that evidence is compelling enough to support those assertions.

    [3] The informal and non-binding nature of such “advice” is also made clear in the IND regulations themselves.  21 C.F.R. § 312.41(c).  Moreover, it is noted that the communication did not even involve the IND applicant, Bioport, Inc.

    [4] I address possible/likely reasons that the DoD insisted on this particular vaccine over all other possibilities in later chapters and let the reader decide.

    [i] Congressional Impeachment hearings on Pres. Richard Nixon.

    [ii] Request for Proposals (RFP) No. DAMD 17-85-R-0078, US Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity, Fort Detrick, Frederick, MD, 16 May 1985.

    [iii] Id.

    [iv] Congressional Hearings on the Anthrax Vaccination Program, Oct 12, 1999, NSVAIR (II), testimony of Dr. Kathryn Zoon, cited in H. Rep. 106-556, fn 22, “DoD AVIP: Unproven Force Protection.”

    [v] Id.

    [vi] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 25-23 November 1999.

    [vii] Letter from former Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert B. Barker to former U.S. Sen. John Glenn, chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, 24 Aug 1989, transcript of Senate Hearing 101-744. The letter and quotes from Barker to Glenn are on page 474 and 480.

    [viii] Congressional Hearings on the Anthrax Vaccination Program, Oct 12, 1999, NSVAIR (II), testimony of Dr. Sue Bailey, cited in H. Rep. 106-556, fn 22, “DoD AVIP: Unproven Force Protection.”

    [ix] Id.

    [x] Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 3/90, p. 156

    [xi] Maj. Gen. Ronald Blanck, Commanding General, Walter Reed Army Hospital, to Committee staff, 414 Russell Senate Office Bldg., Washington, DC, 4 Feb 1994, from Senate Report 103-97, 8 Dec 94, page 35.

    [xii] Plotkin’s Vaccines, ed. Stanley A. Plotkin, Walter A. Orenstein, Kathryn M. Edwards. See chapter by Dr. Arthur Friedlander on anthrax.

    [xiii] Senate Veterans Affaires Committee staff report 103-97, 414 Russell Senate Office Bldg., Washington, DC, 4 Feb 1994, from Senate Report 103-97, 8 Dec 94, Note 61-63.

    [xiv] GAO T-NSIAD-99-226, July 21, 1999 (p. 10)

    [xv] Id.

    [xvi] H. Rep. 106-556, p. 32.

    [xvii] GAO report 99-226 p. 10

    [xviii] H. Rep. 106-556

    [xix] SAIC Corporation plan, 29 Sep 1995, enclosure to memorandum from Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar (US Army) to Dr. Robert Myers (MDPH), US Army Medical Research and Material Command, Fort Detrick, Frederick, MD, 5 Oct 1995.

    [xx] LTC David Danley, “Minutes of the Meeting on Changing the Food and Drug Administration License for the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH) Anthrax Vaccine to Meet Military Requirements”, held on 20 Oct 1995 meeting; Joint Program Office for Biological Defense memorandum, 13 Nov 1995.

    [xxi] Id.

    [xxii] Id.

    [xxiii] Briefing slide from Anthrax Vaccine License Amendment Plan: Information Briefing for Joint Program Manager, DoD Biological Defense, page 18. Oct 19, 1995.

    [xxiv] LTC David Danley, “Minutes of the Meeting on Changing the Food and Drug Administration License for the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH) Anthrax Vaccine to Meet Military Requirements,” held on 20 Oct 1995 meeting; Joint Program Office for Biological Defense memorandum, 13 Nov 1995.

    [xxv] Id.

    [xxvi] Dr. Stephen C. Joseph, DoD ASD/Health Affairs, letter to FDA Lead Deputy Commissioner Michael Friedman, 4 Mar 1997

    [xxvii] Id.

    [xxviii] Id.

    [xxix] 120 S. Ct. 1655, 2000 U.S. LEXIS 3003 (May 1, 2000).

    [xxx]  Christensen, 2000 U.S. LEXIS 3003 at 19-20.

    [xxxi] FDA letter to MBPI, 20 Feb 1997.

    [xxxii] Ann Rees, “Their Dangerous Dose,” The Province [Vancouver, Canada], 25 Jun 2000

    [xxxiii] See, e.g., DoD Press Briefing, Dec. 15, 1997.

    [xxxiv] SecDef William Cohen on “This Week” with Cokie Roberts, Nov. 1997.

    [xxxv] Paul Richter, “Experts Assess Risk of ‘New Terrorism’ Threat,” Los Angeles Times, Feb. 7, 2000.

    [xxxvi] Combating Weapons of Mass destruction, by Jim Garamone, AFPS, 4/30/97; William S. Cohen, “Preparing for a Grave New World”, Washington Post, Op Ed., July 26, 1999; William S. Cohen, “Force Protection is My Priority”, Army Times, July 31, 2000.

    [xxxvii] See GAO Report T-NSIAD-99-148, FN 4, 5.

    [xxxviii] DoD Background Briefing, Apr 6, 1997.

    [xxxix] Combating Weapons of Mass destruction, by Jim Garamone, AFPS, 4/30/97

    [xl] Id.

    [xli] Nov 14, 1997, DoD background briefing

    [xlii] DoD News Briefing, Nov 6, 1997.

  • Against the Common Good

     

    People arguing love to throw around the expression “common sense” but due to the many differences of opinion we can safely say “There is nothing more uncommon than common sense.” Most people tend to think that their opinion is common sense – because how could it not be. It is a mostly meaningless term that sounds good superficially. We can very well throw in some meaningless quotes about if from a quick internet search like Common sense is nothing more than a deposit of prejudices laid down by the mind before you reach eighteen, which is probably not an actual quotation anyway, but what would be the point?

    Just as meaningless and ill-defined as common sense, and equally chucked about in debate, is the notion of common good, which, again, superficially sounds nice. I mean what kind of antisocial monster is against the common good, the good of all? Well me apparently. Hitler and Stalin and Pol Pot on the other hand were all for the common good…

     Never forget the amount of totalitarianism, war, genocide, eugenics and other unpleasant bits of business that were committed in the name of “The Common Good” TM, because, being so unclear but pleasant sounding, it was always used by the ruthless to manipulate the masses into action. Just because your idea of common good seems, to you at least, shiny and pink and cool and innocent and well-meaning, it does not mean it is. And you should not try to impose your particular opinion as common, especially not at the point of a gun.

    One cannot objectively and universally define the common good, even vaguely so. As such, it is a term that superficially sounds good, while its meaning can be manipulated in a probably myriad of ways in the interest of whoever wants a bit of the old power. I find few concepts as pernicious and dangerous as the common good, due to the very fact that is sound “right” to so many, and a cursory look at history will find many atrocities justified by it. This is especially true when actions are undertaken now for some common good which will arrive at an unspecified date in the future. Such a vague future achievement is often called upon to excuse use of force today.

    Each human being is subjective. Each has a subjective view of his own good and of the good of society. There is quite rarely a wide consensus on this. How could there be? Some believe you can extrapolate a common good from millions of different subjective views on good, but then again some are often assholes.

    Some of you may stop and wonder at this moment. Pie, you will say, you support ideas of objective morality, although that is also subjective, just like good. I do, but I see a difference between the two. My objective morality, what should be the basis of the law, is just a subset of the entire moral/ethics conundrum and is based on what seems to me a clear fact – that human beings are individual, independent beings. When these beings interact, conflict arises and it needs a way to be resolved, and the actual rules of conflict resolution should be as objective as possible. Because they are not about one person, they are about all people. And for me, something along the lines of the NAP are as good as it gets. This is why I am a libertarian.

    The concept of common good is different. It has more complex moral judgements inside it that go beyond conflict resolution. It has specific goal of outcomes of multiple aspects of life. It imagines a certain world in which people behave a certain way, have access to a certain lifestyle, and do certain things. But when you look at it a little deeper, though you may be inclined not to as it takes time and there’s something rather good on TV – shows are getting crazy good lately, there is no clear notion of what common good might be, and even if you knew, it would be hard to predict if some policy or other would advance this „good”.

    The so-called arrogance of the so-called elites, one of the things populist ideologies often exploit, is that they know better what is good for everybody, which is, obviously, horseshit. Maybe some don’t know what is good for them, whatever this may mean, but it’s their right to decide. One of the most insulting things politicians say of people who do not vote for them is that they vote against own interests, as if, for example, when you are not rich, it is always your interest to get hand-outs from others. Who knows what is best? I sure as hell don’t, probably not for me and certainly not for others, and I like to think I am above average in intelligence and information. How does a bureaucrat – who is most likely not above average intelligence – know better? Because, make no mistake, this is what the common good most often gets down to, government imposed things. Furthermore how can someone be considered incapable of choosing what is good for themselves, but at the same time perfectly capable of selecting the best politician -which also advocates for some definition of good or other?

    This problem with “good” has been amply demonstrated through history, form heretics persecuted by religion, dissidents by politics; commitment or lobotomy in case of many psychological problems. Women were sterilized for the good of themselves or society by moralizing judges in the United States and elsewhere, women and children separated from families and stuck in orphanages and workhouses. People seem to think society evolved and this can no longer happen; or that if they are in charge, this would not happen; and I am supposed to take their word for it, or something. To be honest, I’d rather not take the chance. Remember, just because you want the best doesn’t mean you know what that is. Empathy is good to a point, but the road to hell is paved with good intentions. You may want to help but make things worse.

    From a liberty standpoint, being a serf to the common good, to society, rather than to an individual, is still being a serf. That is what collectivist and people talking about the common good refuse to understand about libertarianism. Self-ownership is, for all intents and purposes, a much more objective measure than common good. Because self-ownership has clear boundaries and a clear definition- own your body as long as you respect the fact that others own theirs.

     “I hold it to be the inalienable right of anybody to go to hell in his own way.” Robert Frost

     

  • Letter to the Editor

    I was going through some personal papers and found this copy of a letter I had written nearly 30 years ago. Re-reading it was almost as if it had been written yesterday, other than some events were dated. Pretty much everything else is current. It was written as I was finishing up my house and preparing to retire and the tax people were overjoyed that someone would actually move into a rural area. Over the years I have written a lot of angry letters to the local papers but I always included copies to those I was maligning. Sadly to say nothing ever changed because of my exercises in futility. I used to go to the local town board meetings, my complaints always were about the use or misuse of tax payer money to support those things that weren’t governmental  (such as Boy Scouts, fireworks displays, various donations, etc). I had a number of aggravations with the zoning board/land use/building permits at the county level as well.
    I finally got worn down and gave up, elections didn’t change anything, mindsets never changed. Once a precedence is set it’s tough to change, even at the lowest level.
    A lot of the letters never saw daylight, local papers often pick and chose the opinions that are not confrontational. I did get picked up by some other publications that reprinted my letters, however.
    _________________________

  • Catalonia Update. The Last Ride of Don Swissxote?

    I have begged OMWC to have this morning’s spot. In place of your normal links, you get…The Last Ride (?) of Don Swissxote.

     

    Is Barcelona Burning?

    The TRIAL OF TEH CENTURY (Sedition charges against the leaders of the 2017 Catalan Independence referendum) finished up. The announced verdicts were about what was expected. Then things got a bit unruly. Pro-independence groups called a general strike Friday. Here is a slim BBC blurb on that.

    So here we are, Catalans. The EU is backing Madrid, of course. Nobody seems to be ready to do anything other than clear a throat or maybe give with a mild “harumph”. It is up to you. Do you want to be independent? You will have to fight for it. And I mean FIGHT. Armed combat. Killing. Property damage. Not protest, strike, and wave banners.

    Some of the Basque tried. For over 50 years the ETA waged low level war. They failed…But to me at least, they were a group more “leftist” than “fighting for independence”.

    So, will Catalonia take up arms?

    I think they will not do so. They have had 2 years to be ready for this day…and not a whole lot else happened. What took place were the actions of a people that prefer independence, in the same manner you prefer a salad dressing. “Oh, its not available? OK, I’ll settle for ________.”

     

    “The Barcelona Yoke Passing”

     

    Don Swissxote can hang up his spurs.

  • Chapter 11: United States v. Stonewall, July 2000

    “Are you ready?’  Justin and I collected our paperwork. I had defended Marines and sailors facing a lot more time or charged with much more serious crimes, yet I was more nervous than I had ever been before walking into court.

    “Hope so.” I muttered. I did not have my usual confidence. It wasn’t because I didn’t believe I would give a good presentation, or that the law and facts weren’t on my side – which is the norm in criminal defense. It was because I knew that it wouldn’t matter. I had reached the inevitable conclusion that no matter what I did, the judge was not going to find the order to take the anthrax vaccine unlawful or, even a lower standard, allow us to overcome the government’s presumption of lawfulness and get in front of a jury. It simply wasn’t going to happen.

    “Are you ready, Lance Corporal Stonewall?” I turned to Jason Stonewall, who sat in the chair, hands folded in his lap. He had a slight, beatific smile on his face. Jason Stonewall had four plus years of college and was a bright young man; he also had a sterling reputation as a machine-gunner. He believed in the Marine Corps, in its officers, and in its legal system.

    “Yes, sir!” He stood up. Whenever Stonewall spoke, he reminded me of Cuba Gooding, Jr. He looked a bit like the actor except that Stonewall was broader in the face and chest. His voice even had the same raspy quality. I once told him this and he laughed.

    “Captain S,” Stonewall began, “if anybody was ever ready for this argument, it’s you.” I wanted to say thank you, but I just smiled in return, the pinched kind, the one I knew I used to avoid having to say anything inadequate or lie. Lance Corporal Stonewall also believed in us – in Justin and me – so completely and that was what disturbed me the most. I felt like an actor in a badly written play.

    “Let’s go.” We headed to the courtroom.

    We took our seats, me on the inside, closest to the opposing counsel and the judge, Justin at the far end of the table, with Stonewall in between us. Just yesterday we had sat here with our expert witness, Doctor Michael Cohen, on the stand, explaining the microbiology of the anthrax vaccine in detail. While his testimony helped, it hadn’t won the day, which we knew anyway. Mike Cohen wasn’t an anthrax expert. In fact, when he first walked into my office, I pegged him as something else entirely. He had a briefcase and an inquisitive manner and he had read about my court case involving Petty Officer Ponder.

    Reporter, I had thought, except something was a bit…eccentric about him. After a bit of conversation, I finally figured out he was a scientist and felt guilty. I could easily have been Mike Cohen had it not been for choices earlier in my life. I once wanted to be a research scientist and had spent the summer between my junior and senior years of high school studying astronomy at the University of Georgia under the Director of the Astronomy and Physics Department.  Later, I submitted a paper based upon that research to the annual Westinghouse Science Talent Search. I came in the Top Forty in the Nation and was invited to Washington, D.C. to compete with 39 other students for some serious scholarship money. I learned two things at that week-long competition: first, that there were some incredibly smart high school scientists out there(!); second, I was not cut-out to be one of them.

    Mike Cohen reminded me of some of those students. Incredibly intelligent, knowledgeable about his chosen subject matter, but not necessarily able to communicate it outside of the circle of academia to the layperson. Mike had come through when the court refused all of our experts from the states to come testify. A biology professor at the University of Maryland, he had his Ph.D. in microbiology and had offered his help in Petty Officer Ponder’s case because of his belief that the anthrax vaccine was not properly made, nor safe, and nor based upon scientifically valid data. He had Marines in his biology class who had adverse reactions form the vaccine and as a scientist, he had to investigate. I was grateful for his help, but he was just another actor in the U.S. military’s comedy of errors.

    “All rise,” Captain Kolomjec intoned as the Judge came in.

    After getting through the preliminaries, Judge Stone got down to business.

    “Okay. Let’s talk about who should begin first. It is, after all, the government’s motion in limine, but the defense has the burden of rebutting a presumption in the government’s favor. I think we could probably cut to the chase and let the defense go first, given that presumption, unless either party objects.”

    There were no objections. Major Stone turned to me.

    “Sir, you have the floor.”

    I stood up and moved out away from our table and out into the well, the middle of the courtroom.

    “Thank you, sir. First, I would like to point out where we are and where we are going. The government has a presumption in its favor, a rebuttable presumption, which is not impossible to overcome. The defense need only put on enough evidence to overcome that presumption in order for the accused, Lance Corporal Stonewall,” I turned and gestured to Jason, who looked studious with his glasses on, “to get his day in court.”

    “What’s the quantum? I mean, clearly you can rebut, but what is the quantum of evidence required?” Thankfully, I had looked into this. My law school civil and criminal procedure professor had prepared me well.

    “Sir, the case law isn’t clear that it’s a preponderance, but it would certainly seem contrary to notions of fairness if it were beyond a reasonable doubt. Having analyzed this–”

    “Well, is it just some evidence? A scintilla, as it were?”

    “Sir, it is the defense’s opinion that procedurally this is like a motion for summary judgment in the civilian legal system. The government has essentially asked you to find that there are no genuine issues of material fact with respect to the lawfulness of the order and that the accused therefore has no right to get into court at all, sir. Thus, we find ourselves procedurally, in a similar situation to a motion for summary judgment.” I waited for the Judge’s reaction.

    “In reverse, you mean.” He caught right on. That’s what I liked most about Judge Eric Stone.

    “Exactly, sir – in reverse. Therefore, if the accused can show there is or are genuine issues of material fact, then the case should be allowed to go forward. Support for that, sir, comes form the case of Unger versus Ziemniak, which we think is a propos of our current circumstances.” I paused a moment to see if he was following, and as I gathered myself for the crux of this first part, Justin quietly slipped a copy of the Unger case onto the podium for me. Thank you, I mouthed silently, as I tuned to pick it up from the lectern behind me.

    This was the most clever play I had, something I had labored over, discussed with other lawyers, researched, and thought was the one chance we had to win this case. I would never be able to convince the judge straight up to say the order was illegal. It would throw the entire Anthrax Vaccine Program into disarray. A military judge in some obscure outpost on the edges of the Empire – Camp Foster, Okinawa, Japan – was not going to invalidate the entire DoD Anthrax program. I thought I was good, but I wasn’t that in love with my arguments. No, instead, I was simply trying to get the judge to give me one, small thing: let me put what evidence I had before a jury. I might not trust “the system” to get it right, but I did trust military juries. Even though I had only a few months as a lawyer, I had interned as a prosecutor, been a legal officer in my squadron, and been an officer for almost ten years. That experience convinced me of one ineluctable fact: Marines, especially on juries, want to do the right thing and will do so regardless of what it means to broader equities, if they’re allowed to see the evidence.

    I just needed to convince the judge that we were entitled to an opportunity to at least put on some evidence to a jury.

    “In Unger, sir, a female Navy Lieutenant refused a mandatory urinalysis test. Appellate case law by then had made clear the validity of the order to submit to a urinalysis in the military. There was no question about the validity of that order. Such orders had already been challenged on Fourth Amendment and a number of other grounds and failed.

    Lieutenant Unger specifically challenged the validity of the provision in the military’s urinalysis program – in the written order – that required direct observation of the act of urinating into the cup. She filed a motion that the order was unlawful as a matter of law. The trial judge ruled against her and she took an extraordinary writ, an appeal of the judge’s decision, all the way to the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.” Judge Stone was leaning forward, squinting, and appeared genuinely interested… or so I hoped.

    “Interestingly, sir, CAAF decided against Lieutenant Unger on the lawfulness of the order. The Court said, as we would all expect, that the order was lawful. However, the Court did not dismiss her claim. Instead the Court found, essentially, that there still existed ‘genuine issues of fact’ about the circumstances under which she would be required to take the test that a jury might find violated her statutory and Constitutional rights. The Court pointed out, for example, while direct observation might be lawful, if the direct observation were required by a male, that might be an “unreasonable” seizure under the Fourth Amendment. Or, if the order in question had a procedure or was being conducted such that the observer was required to watch from within 18 inches, their face, um, right there, as it were,” I held up my hands as if I were a Hollywood director framing a shot, or at least like I had seen other people mimic, “then the Court noted that a factfinder might conclude that was unreasonable.” I had gotten through that entire exposition with no disagreements, no argument from the Bench, which could mean one of two things – either he agreed or didn’t care.

    “This is exactly where we find ourselves today, sir. The defense has, under four prongs I will address in a moment, put forth sufficient evidence to show that there exist genuine issues of material fact about the lawfulness of the order. Like Lieutenant Unger, the process under which the shot is given could be viewed by a finder of fact as unlawful because of matters that the defense has submitted. This does not mean that we will win at trial. It might be that a jury decides, after hearing the defense evidence, that it still was lawful and therefore we lose. But for the purposes of this motion and whether you should find that as a matter of law the order was lawful, there exist genuine issue of material fact about the lawfulness. I would like to turn to those matters now.” Still no disagreement, so I ploughed on.

    “First of all sir, we turn to 10 USSC, section 1107.” I was warmed up now and somewhere I still believed that a military judge, this military judge, might do the right thing. Justin put the statute in front and sat back down.

    “Sir, there is no straight-faced argument that the anthrax vaccine is not an investigational new drug or a drug unapproved for its applied use. Those are the words of the statute. If it is either an IND or a drug unapproved for its applied use, then there is a real question about the lawfulness of the order to take the shot. You have, sir – the defense has given you in previous submissions, the 1996 application by the manufacturer of the drug that requests an amendment to the existing license to get an indication for aerosolized anthrax. This is presumptive – conclusive evidence, I would say – that the drug is an IND.” I paused and Justin slid the affidavit of Mr. Sammie Young onto the podium, another gift from Lou Michels and several other persons who were involved in fighting this back in the states. Sammie Young had been Deputy Director of the FDA during the time that AVA had been licensed and the procedures for licensing a vaccine had been developed. He simply couldn’t believe that the FDA had given the DoD a pass on the whole issue.

    “The idea being why would the manufacturer put it in an IND status if you yourself, if the manufacturer, didn’t think it was an IND,” the military judge supplied.

    “Exactly, sir. Also, it’s an IND because, as you can see from the affidavit of Mr. Sammie Young, former Deputy Director of the FDA, that once a company submits an IND, the drug becomes an IND thirty days after the submission when used for the purposes listed in the IND. Thus, one of the listed reasons for the IND is an aerosolized indication, if it I being used for an aerosolized indication, it’s an IND. Period.”

    “Okay,” the judge held up his hand, “suppose I agree with you.”

    “Yes, sir.” Suddenly this seemed to be going too well and I was wary. I had never had a time, in any real or mock proceeding where a judge began with “suppose I agree . . .” or “suppose I grant your point . . .” that ended particularly well.

    “…That it’s an investigational new drug in accordance with 1107. I mean, you can put on, it appears, a lot of evidence on that and it may in fact, be the case. What I’m really interested in is why should this accused be able to, in law, use 1107 in a military court-martial?” There was a strange moment after that question, of complete Zen-like clarity, where I saw exactly where this was all leading, but my mind simply refused to acknowledge it. I had only had two of those moments of satori, of seeing into the heart of things, in my life. The first was as a troubled teenager, not long after I had run away from home, but the second one was the only other time in my life where I could recall a moment, a specific, measurable instant, where my mind simply refused to accept what I could see was about to happen: that other time, I was in a hover at one-hundred and fifty feet when the second engine on my helicopter quit and we started to lose turns on our rotor head and fallout of the sky. I felt connected across time in that instant in the courtroom, and then my mind walled it off.

    The judge must have caught that something was wrong.

    “I don’t mean to cut you off, but –”

    “No… No, sir.”

    “Your evidence in support of the argument you have just made is extensive, and it is before me to consider. And I’m telling you that I understand the logic of your argument. But I’m interested in why this accused should be able to raise that federal law in this court-martial in the absence of a direct statutory conferral of rights.”

    “Yes, sir, then I’m more than happy to move on to save the court’s time.” But this was a lie, I was not more than happy. Nothing could have been further from the truth. I knew then that the case was over. I should have responded the way I immediately wanted to – “Because it’s a fucking federal law, you honor. You mean we get to ignore federal law we don’t like in courts-martial now? I can’t point out the LAW in a military court, that’s what you’re saying?” I stopped, picked up a pen off of the lectern, and pretended to write something.

    Suddenly, an idea popped into my head that I hadn’t thought of before. I had been reading a ton of constitutional law and perhaps…

    “I would point out, sir, that when we’re talking about substantive rights, it is the history of our country that rights are not stated in the affirmative, as in ‘you have a right to X’, but rather are listed as limitations upon the acts of others, particularly the government. For example, the Fourth Amendment doesn’t say you have a right to privacy, but instead says that you have a right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. The Bill of Rights, sir, is almost entirely comprised of limitations on government, not as positive statements of rights. But let’s move on to the more concrete, to 1107.”  My thoughts started to coalesce.

    “Okay.” He paused and wrote something down.

    “First of all, the DoD has always held the position, and still does today, that ‘soldiers are citizens first’ and have the same Constitutional rights as other citizens –’”

    “But that’s a non-lawyer speaking about ethics.”

    “True, sir, but the rule – the law – since Nuremberg has been that informed consent is a prerequisite to experimenting on human subjects. And that was adopted into federal law, sir, at 50 U.S.C. section 1520a. It prohibits military medical experimentation.”

    “But it’s not your position that the force protection argument by the government is somehow a cover for an experiment?”

    “Sir, the motives may be well-intentioned –”

    “– but you’re saying it could be an experiment de facto or something?”

    “No, sir, I am saying it is an experiment. By definition. When you are giving someone a vaccine and you have parts of it that are, by Dr. Cohen’s testimony and the DoD’s own words ‘not well-defined’, you don’t know what’s going to happen. You have a hypothesis that this should provide some protection, but the DoD doesn’t know that. You might have a hypothesis that it doesn’t cause long-term reactions, but you don’t know that because we know there have been no long-term studies. And we also know this: we know that there is a lot of research in the peer-reviewed literature that suggests a connection to Gulf War Illness, that the vaccine causes bad things to happen to the human body, like the reaction to the amount of aluminum in the vaccine that Doctor Cohen talked about, or the high antigen load that he discussed and its possible adverse effect on the immune system.”

    “So, yes, it is an experiment, sir, and unfortunately, the results aren’t in yet. And 2.4 million service members are going to be the guinea pigs.” I should have left the point there, but I couldn’t.

    “We tend, sir, to put ourselves above this – we say Nuremberg was passed because of the Nazis, and we tend to forget that many of their experiments were non-lethal and some of them produced important knowledge for medicine today. But the harm is not just what was done as a result of the experiment; it’s not just the experiment, it’s that informed consent was not obtained from the human beings on the other end of the needle. That itself is the harm.” The judge’s face told me all I needed to know; he thought I was loony. We had had this same argument in Ponder’s case since he was the same judge for all three anthrax refusal cases. His view was that the Nuremberg Code applied to Nazis, not “good guys” in the U.S. military. I decided to move on.

    “Now, sir, why does 1107 apply is the real question?”

    “Well, not necessarily ‘why.’ Let’s assume that Congress wanted consent to be derived in this class of drugs.”

    “Yes, sir.”

    “And that does seem reasonable. I’m with you that Congress wanted to have an informed consent procedure in place.”

    “It’s an individual right, sir. It doesn’t belong to the Secretary of Defense.” He held up his hand.

    “Why should this court not assume that they were putting constraints on the Secretary of Defense? Why should I assume that they weren’t – I mean, what is the intended mechanism of enforcement? It’s silent on it. You’re asking this court to believe – or to infer – that the mechanism to enforce or uphold this right – is to judicially confer rights upon the accused. That is, recognizing the matter on paper and allowing a defendant to use this law to defend himself against such an inoculation.” I was confused.  To this day I still am.

    “To read it otherwise, sir, is to put a strained interpretation on it. Because what else can be done? What else can this person do when they are told to take a drug that is clearly investigational, or experimental? If it is interpreted to mean that it confers nothing to service members, the SecDef could order them injected with anything – arsenic – as long as he thinks it’s a good force protection measure. What do they do in the meantime?  Go to jail while they wait for Congress to hold the SecDef in contempt of Congress?”

    There were a lot better, more eloquent arguments. As I sit here today, I can think of several. But I was spent. I could hear my own incredulity. I could not believe that the judge was saying that if a military order that violates a federal law, even if you can prove it violates federal law, unless that law says specifically that the law is meant or allowed to be used in courts-martial, he simply wouldn’t look at it.

    I felt like a drowning man who knows he is too far from shore to make it, but swims on anyway because of the organism’s instinct for survival. I argued on, but it was fruitless. We took a recess. Back in my office, I fell into my chair.

    “Dale, I think that was one of the best arguments I’ve seen.” Justin patted me on the back. I appreciated the compliments, but I had a feeling he was trying to prop me up.

    “Thanks, man.” Lance Corporal Stonewall sat watching me. I couldn’t look him in the eyes.

    “Lance Corporal Stonewall, can you give us a minute. I want to discuss some other stuff with Captain Constantine?” Stonewall replied yes, stood up, came to attention, and then stepped out. When he was gone I swore.

    “I just couldn’t sit here with him looking at me, knowing that we’re going in the tank.” Justin didn’t say anything for a minute.

    “Think he’s going to rule against us?”

    “It’s a bet. I had a talk with him and Kolomjec in his office, might have been regarding Ponder’s case, but I kept arguing with him about this conferral of rights crap that he says you need. I threw out the hypothetical in our brief, that what if a Lance Corporal is a driver and the General orders him to speed, to do fifty-five in a school zone and the driver refuses and then he’s later court-martialed. Under Stone’s theory, the Lance Coolie can’t plead the speed limit as a defense to the lawfulness of the order; it doesn’t confer any rights! The state legislature never intended it to be used as a defense in a court-martial! Fuck.”

    “Then he started lecturing me about paradigms and how the military is different than the civilian world. ‘It’s a different paradigm, he said.’ Fuck. Fuck.” I was rambling and Justin knew me well enough to let me blow off some steam.

    “Well, what do we do now?” he asked. A pragmatic question.

    “Let me think.” I rubbed my forehead. “Well, he’ll announce his findings and then we’ll probably take pleas. Then, maybe, we’ll set a date for the court next week or something. Once he rules, I don’t think he’s going to give us a lot of time before the court. What’s today, the 25th?” I no longer could keep track of days. I wasn’t sleeping much at all, and when I did sleep it was usually because I had dozed off at the desk in my base housing quarters, with my office in a section of the living room, where my wife would find me in front of the computer if she happened to get up in the middle of the night.

    Justin looked at his watch. “Twenty-six July.”

    “Oh. Okay. Well, let’s get back into court.” I stood up.

    “Dale?” I looked back at Justin and raised my eyebrows. “We gave it our best shot, man. You… we couldn’t have done any more than we did.” I nodded my head, but it didn’t make me feel any better. I walked out the door feeling like a man on his way to his execution.

                                                                                                                                                                                       

    “The defense contends that the order to submit to anthrax vaccination violates a Presidential Executive Order and Federal and International Laws and is therefore an illegal order, so the accused could lawfully refuse to obey. As the court sees it, there are four issues presented. We’ll discuss them in order.” I sat watching as Major Stone read from a sheet he had prepared. He hadn’t written it in the recess since our last session, so I knew that he had been drafting it before I had finished my argument. He’d already decided before oral argument and I’d done nothing to change his mind. I already knew the outcome.

    “The first one, does Executive Order 13139 confer legal rights upon the accused enforceable at courts‑martial?” Just the way he framed the question bothered me. The question wasn’t who got what conferred, it was whether the order was lawful or not. That question had been lost a long time ago and it wasn’t going to get answered in this courtroom.

    “Answer: no. The Executive Order in question is a policy decision of the President taken in his capacity as Commander‑in‑Chief of the Armed Forces. Also, violations of an Executive Order are not judicially enforceable unless the Constitution or Federal Law otherwise requires enforcement.

    “Two: Does 10 U.S.C. 1107 confer legal rights upon the accused enforceable at courts‑martial? No. 10 U.S.C. 1107 imposes obligations on the Secretary of Defense to obtain the informed consent of service members in the event that the Secretary desires to employ an investigational new drug or to use a drug in a manner inconsistent with its FDA approved usage. The text of the law does not directly state that the Secretary’s obligations are also legal rights of service members enforceable at courts‑martial, nor does the statute provide a fair basis for conferral of rights by implication because the statue does not employ wording typically associated with such a legislative conferral of rights. Other federal statutes, in particular, criminal statutes expressly provide for the conferral of rights upon service members. Given that Congress has in the past specifically provided for the rights of service members in other‑statutes and could have done so in 10 U.S.C. 1107, it would be judicial speculation to presume that Congress would desire to do so in this case. In fact, it may well be that Congress does not desire to grant individual rights to two million or so service members, but rather chose to make one officer, the Secretary of Defense, accountable for obtaining the informed consent of service members.”

    I looked down and noticed I was scribbling notes. Habit. None of it made any sense.

    “Finally, along the same lines, any inquiry as to whether or not the Secretary of Defense, a civilian political appointee, has complied with 10 U.S.C. 1107 is a non-justiciable political issue between Congress and the Secretary, that is, it is beyond the reach of decision by military courts‑martial.” There it was. I had known that was coming. There was no way he was going to rule that the Secretary of Defense had violated the law, no matter how clear it was.

    “Issue 3: Does the Nuremberg Code as codified at 50 U.S.C. 1520(a) confer rights on the accused enforceable at courts‑martial?” Now this was the real coup. The Nuremberg Code, despite its clear language, did not apply to one class of persons:  second class citizens, known as U.S. service members.

    “Answer of this court: No. 50 U.S.C. 1520(a) prevents experimentation on service members without their informed consent. The defense claims that the anthrax vaccination program is essentially a large‑scale medical experiment and, therefore, 50 U.S.C. 1520(a) applies. More specifically, the defense argues that because there have been no long‑term studies of the effects of the anthrax vaccination, the DoD ­inoculation program is a de facto medical experiment. This court declines to adopt that view.

    “The DoD vaccination program on its face appears to be a reasonable and time‑tested force protection measure. That is, inoculation against disease designed to counter a real‑world threat of biological attack.” I looked over at Lance Corporal Stonewall. He looked back at me and gently put his hand on my arm, grimacing a little, but other than that, no reaction. It was all I could do not to cry. Some lawyers would say that I had become too personally involved in my case, something I had thought about a lot in my brief time as a defense attorney: my reply would be “so what?”

    “Four: Is an order for a service member to submit to the anthrax vaccination so inherently unsafe and dangerous in light of its proper justification as to make it arbitrary or capricious and, therefore, illegal? Answer: No. The defense has provided no evidence of any death or serious bodily injury that has resulted from administration of the anthrax vaccine to over 1.7 million service members. The government, on the other hand, has presented evidence that anthrax is 100 percent fatal if inhaled, that several actual military adversaries presently have the capability to attack U.S. Armed Forces with aerosolized anthrax, and that animal modeling studies suggest that inoculation may provide a significant measure of protection against aerosolized anthrax attack.” I had heard a Navy doctor explain that he read the DoD website, but we hadn’t been allowed to bring an expert to show the falsity of those statements and conclusions.

    “In sum, then, I find the order to submit to the anthrax inoculation was a legal order as a matter of law and will so instruct the members if that is the forum selected in this case. Accordingly then, based on the reasoning above, as for the two defense requests for experts in this case, those requests are denied.” The cart had come before the horse. We were denied experts to rebut the government’s doctor and that had led to a ruling that our requests were denied. The ol’ Catch-22.

    “Does the defense have any other motions to present?” I stood up slowly.

    “No, sir.” At that point, I finally believed what Lou Michels, our helpful Reserve Air Force attorney and partner in big-time law firm, had said to me on the phone one day: no military judge was going to find the order to take the anthrax vaccine illegal. It wouldn’t matter how twisted the reasoning it took to get there.

    “Then this court is in recess.”

     

  • How I Became a Libertarian: Southern Child Edition

    I didn’t have a eureka moment.  I didn’t get fed up with a political party.  A well-read child of resourceful, simple, and hard-working parents who had escaped generations of small, impoverishing family farms, my first notion was always independence.  Before any formal concept of agency, utility, or property ever washed into an ear, I knew I valued my own counsel above all others, and my strongest urge and desire was simply to be left alone.

    We moved around a lot for Dad’s work until I was nine.  Over the years I went to school, to church, to everything expected save prom.  I dressed like my farmer uncles and ignored top 40 and drugs.  We were quiet Primitive Baptists and as such unmoved by many worldly notions; particularly, we rejected religious bureaucracy, hierarchy in the church, and evangelism; we had no catechism, no articles or rules save the King James Version, and often shared a preacher amongst our rare and remote congregations.  My first social organization was based on individual interpretation and responsibility.

    Early on, I was forced to lead a prayer in school a full decade after Engel in the civilized place (Tennessee) in which we finally landed, far away from the redneck places and institutions I thought I had escaped.  Maybe I could have objected, but the expectation was clear and direct, and the unanimous opinion of my peers meant that I had finally landed in a situation from which there was no retreat.  The task was easy enough and not unpleasant; I merely resented being forced, being put upon, and not being left alone.  I began to cultivate a distrust of institutions and the force they could wield.

    From this I launched into a childhood a bit defensive and cautious, my clannish hill instincts mixing poorly in the factory towns my father was transferred betwixt.  He was a produce clerk, decent and humble, so Christmas only came once a year at our house, and I learned to jealously hoard and defend every crumb and opportunity.  I never learned to loan or share as a child, and I dug emotional fallback trenches for every possible social situation that life in town might thrust upon me.  I preferred rifles, guitars, spinning reels, engines and, eventually, a tiny blonde thing from Kansas, but mostly I liked reliable devices that didn’t have opinions, and I spent most of my free time with a trusted few, mostly in the field with rod or gun.  I kept my pocketknife razor keen, earned my merit badges, and paid my speeding tickets quietly.

    Whence money:  waxing store floors on second shift, mowing yards, pizza delivery, shoveling snow, fry cook, farm hand, electrician’s mate.  Money meant more independence, and I loved it more than words can describe, much more than free time after school.  Money also meant deserving the blonde thing who, amazingly, had a humbler situation than mine.  I had always identified with farmers and merchants, and, the more I knew of work and money, the more respect I had for proprietors and the more contempt I had for regulation.  I learned there were federal rules and minimums for most things, and it all seemed silly to me:  my employment was an arm’s length transaction between me and my boss, and no other opinions were needed.

    So I strained at the bit in some ways . . . . and just didn’t care in others.  My hair grew to my shoulders and I seldom shaved.  I learned that homosexuality and interracial marriage existed . . . . and could find no reason to care the way all the adults exhibited that I should care:  that these things were morally wrong and there ought to be a law.  Mostly I hated speed limits and not being able to shoot inside the city limits.  I hated how a cop asked me stupid questions about where I worked while he wrote out my ticket, but I loved how he got enraged when I refused to answer, when I just glared at him while he got hysterical and tried to bluff me into submission.  People and institutions needlessly meddling in others’ lives put me off, and I never got over it.  A flavor of #resist became my base assumption and attitude when I wasn’t on the clock, and I eventually started to notice that government operations were seldom executed to serve and protect . . . and began to constantly ask myself to guess the true motives of those actors.  This was the beginning of my suspicion that I would generally be better off and happier with less government.

    I didn’t like a lot of other things going on around me outside of government, either.  Racism and littering were normal in my culture, but I knew they were wrong, so I figured out that adults were often unethical and hypocritical.  Uncles came back from VietNam with no report of triumph or purpose, neighbors in turn defended and abandoned Nixon, farms failed, and neighbors’ cars were repossessed.  Interest rates soared, and I kept to my books and learned to drive a tractor and to string barbed wire.

    You’d think this sort of environment would have made me a conservative, but few of the conservatives I knew outside my quiet church fell into the live-the-example version of virtue; most were of the bluster and control version, and it seemed like their only goal was to make kids obey the very rules that their parents had mostly skipped.  Abortion was a hot issue with the Catholics, but my people tended to simply marry a girl if love brought along a child a few months before the acceptable plan.  I never had any problems interpreting the operating instructions for a condom, so abortion was just a quiet problem that other people had.  That said, my instinct was and remains that a woman should figure out what was appropriate for her:  it’s not a government panel’s responsibility.  I took good care of my own business, and the Kansas blonde would need to move on to less responsible men before bundles would come into her life.  It never occurred to me to push my opinion in this area on others much less codify it, but I always respected the personhood argument from the pro-lifers because it was rational and genuinely altruistic.  Later I would evolve to think about the family as the base unit for rights in this area, but meanwhile I would be increasingly annoyed by the politicization of the issue.  I would never begrudge anyone’s right to speech or protest, but what was coming across strongest was the energy some people have to regulate border issues.  From this issue I learned that reasonable people can find themselves of opposite views, but I also began to worry about the frontier of public versus private interest and how many would inflate the public sphere to import authority over their neighbors.

    One of the hallmarks of the southern brand of conservatism was militarism.  I had pored over maneuver from Agincourt to Dien Bien Phu as a child; my people had sacrificed in the war of northern aggression, Europe, Korea, and VietNam.  But it never caught on with me:  Dad had been miserable as a cold warrior, a pointless clerk spending at one point a year on a Pacific Island two miles long and two thousand feet wide; he had his pay, but he had nothing else but ridiculous orders and frivolous achievements to show for it.  Mustering out, he was unwanted for his few martial skills and made his way to grocery, and his son learned to love drab canvas only as cheap and handy surplus.  When 200 Marines were blown up in Beirut, I couldn’t think of any rationale that their parents would stand to hear.  I began to revisit and question VietNam, of course, but then:  why Korea?  Many things began to smell like Remember the Maine and the Gulf of Tonkin to me from then on.  Other than retaliating for Pearl Harbor, I came to view most foreign adventures as boondoggles:  the list of military projects that had achieved the desired goals and had respected the original rationales were infinitesimal so far as I could see.  Looking back over a steady chain of deceit and failure, I could hardly see newly posited plans as anything other than American self-deception or power grabs.

    As is surely clear, my politics are in no small part an outgrowth of my underclass surroundings, hillbilly paranoia, and poor potty training, but I read a lot and pretty much every political party had a chance to get the upper hand in my brain . . . but none ever earned it.  I read the paper every day, watched Cronkite if home in time (seldom), and took in several longer forms on TV, including Brinkley on Sunday mornings and Wall $treet Week with Louis Rukeyser on Friday evening.  From these I was learning something critical that my father, who had never finished high school, could not tell me:  what was up in the world, and who was pulling the strings; I might not know everything, but the framework of countries and corporations was becoming clear to me, and I had ceased to couch the actions of the day purely in terms of the mindless patriotism that was stock in the small-town  discussions I might overhear.  Follow the money and similar suspicions become my primary tools to dissecting anything; this didn’t always lead to the quickest answers or the healthiest perspectives, but the shoe fit and paid off more times than not if I just waited and kept reading.

    Further, much further, though, I was propelled by Buckley’s Firing Line.  I shared so many of his religious and reactionary urges and was thunderstruck by his repertoire:  he had towering metaphors for every situation, wrung from history, religion, and mythology.  My vocabulary was skyrocketing, but there was something off:  he was a man who would be king.  I agreed with him on almost everything except the notion that everyone else should necessarily agree with us all the time and live like us and bow at our feet; my journey was convincing me that others should have their own journeys, not that I had found all the answers and should bring them down from the mountain to impose.  Mostly, I learned the appeal to first principles as Buckley wrangled with Galbraith and ombudsman-interlocutor Kensley.  I found calm and respectful debate addictively delightful; even today, the first page I turn to in any publication is the letters to the editor, and I simply don’t consider journals that don’t run them:  honest debate has been more important to me than winning for four decades now.  But as clear-headed as Buckley seemed to me, I couldn’t be attracted to a man or a party that didn’t lead with the freedom card; the arrogance left me suspecting that control was more important to Buckley . . . any by extension to Republicans . . . than baseline liberty.

    Then there were practical and historical problems to weigh.  After Asia ruined everyone’s uncles, the world still wasn’t saved from the commie dominos after all and some divisions never even came home, so it wasn’t clear to me what the plan was or whether it had been worth it.  While I dutifully signed up for Selective Service and did my homework, I couldn’t imagine enlisting in any military nonsense.  I read Catch-22 for about the third time since I was 12 and came to over-identify with Yossarian and became infected with his fear of being trapped in bureaucracy by patriotism.  I came to despise jingoistic declarations and even avoid any movies or other glamorization of warfare; Top Gun came and went, but I took a pass.  I noticed that a love of military toys was crowding out any discussion of when and why the toys should be used.

    I went through a bunch-o-bullets in those days.  I have a Winchester 94 in 22LR, and the barrel’s probably shot out at this point, maybe six minutes of angle now with good ammo and the iron sights, but in those days it was fresh from the factory and I was taking rabbits almost as far out as I could see them.  Usually I bought my Federals, like my Levi’s, at the hardware store (whose rural sales staff thought nothing of it) and then pedaled away to do my damage.  Over at another store, they wouldn’t sell that same caliber because I had to be 21 to buy “pistol ammunition.”  The vacuity of laws and their random implementations were already evident to me before I could legally drive.

    We didn’t heed Carter’s thermostat settings, and I was embarking on life at 14MPG because that’s how work gets done.  That said, monkey actors from California didn’t appeal to me, either; my mother could shoot and swing an ax better than Ronald Reagan, and, having never had much of anything in the first place, I wasn’t hurt by the oil shocks and was just working my way to being my best me and taking little notice of the implosions in the rest of the country.  Unlike my neighbors, I wasn’t motivated to cling to this president any more than I had to Ford or Nixon (who had been figureheads in my childhood and nothing more); I was too busy growing up.  And, anyway, flimsy red baiters were a turn-off:  posers (like the race baiters I also hated), they convicted people for what they said and believed when it seemed to me that any truly dangerous citizen should be prosecuted for what he had done.  I was still stuck on honest debate, but the national mood and its leadership preferred the hysterical; the rule of the day was passion and, it seemed, everyone in my Hooterville was happily going along with whatever Reagan and Falwell told them to believe and do.

    In this time, the rising War on Drugs scared me; I feared the machine’s ruining my life.  Cousins had long-since reported that there were indeed no good chain gangs, and I planned for college while avoiding complications.  Then the WoD hit close to home:  some classmates went down on marijuana charges.  My people had been making their own joy juice in the hills for centuries, so I had inherited no right to second-guess others’ jollies and gave adherents of the weird weed a pass.  I have still never taken an illicit drug, but I never much cared what others did with themselves:  just don’t run into me drunk or stoned and we’re good.  But suddenly lives were being wrecked over victimless crimes.  It was more and more clear:  the government often operated expressly at odds to individual pursuit of happiness, no matter what the Declaration declared.  But don’t drugs destroy lives:  probably, but so did a thousand other things that were somehow still legal.  The arbitrariness of it all with no clear appeal to first principles taught me that probably most of Reagan’s yapping was also unprincipled or should be held in suspicion at a bare minimum.  I wasn’t necessarily gunning for Reagan:  he was simply the first of many grandstanders who would fail to earn my respect.

    I did have progressive urges:  I saw poverty firsthand, wanted more for everyone, and entertained social policies that hoped to improve things.  I didn’t mind the URW’s negotiating as a block if that’s what workers wanted, but I feared that many members had been coerced into signing a union card the way I had been directed to lead a prayer.  The housing project was just a half mile from home, so I also saw multi-generational reliance on the dole up close.  I paid a bit of tax on some W2 jobs, but half of my income was generally cash deals with farmers, and I wasn’t so Eagle Scout as to keep up with it, report it, or give Uncle Sam a cut;  the fiscal and operational mistakes of the government weren’t really hitting me in a way to make me second-guess New Deal residues.  I also saw the Knights of Columbus doing good works around town, and I threw my nickels in the Saint Jude barrow when the frat boys wheeled it through town every year; alms in private were clearly capable of delivering excellence.  Meanwhile the great Republicans (motto:  we understand economics) had literally billions upon billions of reasons why the deficit that they talked about didn’t really need any work on their watch.  From this grand mishmash one could only conclude that there were no general answers, no panacea:  the policies and attitudes and structures were veneers.

    So off to college and marriage and profession I went, and I paid my taxes and stayed on my side of the road.  That included a bit of business school where I came to respect macroeconomics and mastered finance at night while taking a turn in code enforcement during a recession.  I did good work:  decent and serious review and accountability that added no more than 1% value to the work I oversaw; I was working hard, and clearly was more useful than anyone else in my office, and still it came to nearly nothing.  Others were less productive and even less impactful, and I suspected that ours was one of the more serious departments in the entire city government.  Of course, as soon as a going concern and I found each other, I was snapped up by the private sector and, to the dismay of all my relatives, quickly escaped the security of government employment.

    The national numbers came to mean more to me, and I came to respect federal programs less and less the more I knew about them.  Government meant that milk cost easily twice what it should; meanwhile, a new generation had taken to the old housing project as normal as rain.  The fruitlessness of public housing was unavoidable, and paying taxes came to remind me of the Baer line about alimony:  “like buying oats for a dead horse.”  At work, I was managing huge budgets, aligning to product strategies, and capitalizing operations; it was far from clear that any similar diligence was applied at government agencies.  I was deadly serious about capital, but it seemed like a full third of the economy was dedicated to propping up less serious, less productive folks.  I decided that enlightened self-interest was the best management theory and inferred that all government work must therefore be less efficient than deferring to market forces.  In short, minimizing government was necessarily a public good.

    That’s where I remain:  unimpressed by political parties and yearning for autonomy and free markets.  It’s a rich life on the debate side, though:  I gun for everyone, but people only hear when I gun for their guy.  Nobody, no politician, can be perfect, so it continues to boggle my mind why folks get so defensive about balls and strikes called fairly.  My grandmothers would have told you that there was enough sin to go around; I’ll tell you there still is.  I vote pragmatically:  to stymy efficient government as much as possible while resisting as many brakes on freedom as possible.  I hope everyone gets rich, finds love, and leaves content children behind them. . . on their own dime . . . and I hope I can be left alone just as much as is decent and possible.

  • Chapter 9 – The History of the Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA)

    The first use of a human anthrax vaccine took place in 1954.[i] The primary purpose for an anthrax vaccine, like all vaccines, was to provide some prophylaxis for human beings from contracting the anthrax bacteria, which is typically found in cattle and other livestock hides. The people most likely to come into contact with the anthrax spores were (a) livestock handlers, and (b) people who might be handling animal hides in leather-working factories or similar places. The first comprehensive field trial of a human anthrax vaccine was conducted at goat-hair processing mills from 1955-59 in the northeastern United States by Dr. Philip Brachman. This study has come to be known as the Brachman Study because it is, essentially, the only data available on the subject.[ii] In this study, 369 workers in the mill who handled animal hides were vaccinated against the bacteria. The results, while not spectacular, certainly indicated that the vaccine was effective against catching anthrax from handling pelts and hides that had the spores: to be precise, the vaccine trial was designed to provide prophylaxis against contacting anthrax via contact with the skin, the most likely method of encountering the spores. The study showed a “high confidence level of 93% effectiveness” for the vaccine and a low of 65%, a significant spread.

    The Michigan Department of Public Health first produced the Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA) under an Investigational New Drug application (DBS-IND 180) in 1966. MDPH filed a license application for the manufacture of Anthrax Protective Antigen, Aluminum Hydroxide Adsorbed in 1967. The specification for manufacture is based on U.S. Patent 3,208,909. The license application references an article published in “Applied Microbiology” that details the production process. The license to manufacture AVA, granted in 1970, has two parts. One license is for the facility, the Establishment License Application (ELA); the other is for the product itself, the Product License Application (PLA). MDPH produced AVA continuously (if in small quantities) from its first contract (PH21-68-2064) in 1968 until 1997 when MDPH split off its biologics division and privatized it into the Michigan Biologic Products Institute. MBPI in turn sold the facility and its licenses to BioPort, Incorporated, in 1998, a subject to which we will return in detail later.

    Bacillus anthracis is a bacteria that survives in its environment by exuding enzymes that break down surrounding compounds, such as fats, proteins, and polysaccharides (complex sugar molecules). The bacteria then absorb these byproducts. In addition to secreting the enzymes, which serve a nutritional gathering function for the bacteria, anthrax also secretes two toxins, or poisons, known as lethal factor (LF) and edema factor (EF). These two toxins only work, however, when combined with a protein known as Protective Antigen (PA). A vaccine will be effective against anthrax if it confers a certain level of antibody response to the PA, thus inhibiting the expression of LF/EF. In other words, if the vaccine causes the immune system to create enough antibodies that will fight and overwhelm the Protective Antigen, it is considered effective.

    The anthrax vaccine is unique among vaccines in that there is no step in the manufacturing process for purifying the active fraction of the vaccine. The vaccine is made by growing a non-virulent strain of anthrax in a culture. This culture is filtered to remove the bacteria, but the remainder, including the proteins and enzymes, is absorbed onto aluminum oxyhydroxide. The antigens that are absorbed are then centrifuged out of the solution and, without being “washed”, are then resuspended into a saline solution with some preservatives. Because of the way in which the bacteria secretes enzymes and absorbs proteins, the vaccine is

    composed of an undefined crude culture of supernatant adsorbed to aluminum hydroxide. There has been no quantification of the protective antigen content of the vaccine or of any of the other constituents, so the degree of purity is unknown. Standardization is determined by an animal potency test.[iii]

    One would think that this statement must have come from an anthrax vaccine opponent, except that it is from an article authored by Colonel (Dr.) Arthur Friedlander, U.S. Army – as of 2004, the Chief Researcher at the U.S. Army’s Medical Research laboratory at Ft. Detrick, Maryland – and Dr. Philip Brachman, head of the original study on the previous Merck Pharmaceuticals-manufactured anthrax vaccine. As Dr. Friedlander notes, the antibody titer – the level of antibodies produced by the body in response to the vaccine, measured by a blood test – varies widely from lot to lot of the vaccine and is measured by injecting guinea pigs and measuring antibody response. This variety is due, in part, because the manufacturing process, developed in the 1960s, is antiquated by modern microbiology standards, which now control how a vaccine is judged for licensing purposes. All of this means that even under ideal conditions, the vaccine is likely to produce significant differences in potency from batch to batch. The problem with the AVA is that it has never been manufactured under anything even approaching ideal conditions.

    At the same time that the original Brachman study’s results were being published in 1954, the development of the anthrax vaccine continued apace. Interestingly, the vaccine used in the Brachman study was originally made by Merck Pharmaceutical, but it was changed in both content and production method by a new manufacturer, the Michigan Department of Public Health. This changed vaccine, not the original one used in the Brachman study, was what was patented by the U.S. Army in 1965.[iv]

    In 1967, an application was submitted to the National Institute of Health’s Division of Biologics Standards to get a license for the patented vaccine. A study was conducted at a Talladega mill using the newly-patented vaccine: but this study’s results have never been published. There was correspondence between the NIH and the head of the Talladega study indicating that there were problems with the methodology. Dr. Philip Coleman, the head investigator, wrote candidly to the NIH: “As to the efficacy of the vaccine, we have no real method of determining the protection afforded.”[v] There were also memos exchanged regarding the scientific validity of the Talladega study. An ad hoc licensing oversight committee sent a memo to a Dr. Margaret Pittman of the Department of Health Education and Welfare (HEW), the forerunner to the Dept. of Health and Human Services (DHHS), pointing out that “[t]he lack of cases of anthrax in an uncontrolled population of approximately 600 persons in the Talladega mill can hardly be accepted as scientific evidence for efficacy of the vaccine.”[vi] Notwithstanding these problems, Doctor Pittman recommended licensure of the vaccine on February 10, 1969, while acknowledging that “clinical data establishing efficacy of the product had not been submitted and that data be requested from NCDC (National Communicable Disease Center).”[vii] Efficacy data was a prerequisite to licensure by the 1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendments to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, previously detailed in Chapter 5.[1]

    On November 2, 1970, the license for the anthrax vaccine was recommended for approval by HEW without any of the required efficacy data. [viii] The License was granted on 10 November 1970. In an interesting twist, the efficacy data from the earlier Brachman Study was substituted, submitted, and accepted (yet no documentation of this submission has been uncovered). The Brachman Study is actually referenced on the approved package insert, even though the vaccine used in the Brachman Study differed from the licensed vaccine in strain, formulation, and production method. While there are those who will argue (and DoD representatives have before Congress) that the vaccines are sufficiently similar to allow conclusions to be drawn, that is a scientific debate. As a legal matter, it holds no weight. There is absolutely no way today, under the existing regulatory-licensing framework, that a company could get a license for a drug from the FDA by substituting a study from some other company’s drug, made by a different production method, using a different strain of bacteria, from a study done decades before. As one former FDA official who worked in the Department at that time sheepishly admitted, “these were the days when we were trying to help the industry.”[ix]

    When the Department of Biologics Standards was transferred under the FDA in 1973, a review began of all previously licensed vaccines that had not been required to show the necessary efficacy data. The anthrax vaccine would not undergo the necessary review for efficacy data until 12 years later, in 1985. During this review, the FDA concluded that “safety of this product is not a major concern, especially considering its very limited distribution…”[x] The committee also noted that “[a]nthrax vaccine poses no serious special problems other than the fact that its efficacy against inhalation anthrax is not well documented.”[xi] Finally, the Panel concluded that “there is sufficient evidence to conclude that anthrax vaccine is safe and effective under the limited circumstances for which this vaccine is employed.”[xii]

    During the Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program (AVIP) rollout, the DoD publicly long claimed that “the vaccine has ‘an impressive safety record’” and that “it has been widely used for thirty years,” but neither of those statements can be squared with the 1985 review, which resulted in a proposed rule that was never been acted upon.[xiii] The 1985 review noted that “[i]mmunization with this vaccine is indicated only for certain occupational groups with risk of uncontrollable or unavoidable exposure to the organism. It is recommended for individuals who come in contact with imported animal hides, furs, wool, hair (especially goat hair), bristles, and bone meal, as well as laboratory workers involved in ongoing studies on the organism[xiv] The license was granted in 1970, but the vaccine was not widely distributed nor widely used, given the narrow slice of the population involved in animal hide handling. In fact, in November of 1971, the Division of Biologics Standards of the National Institutes of Health, noting an apparent increase in reports of adverse reactions after individuals received booster shots, published guidance on the vaccine’s shot regimen.

    The Division considered it advisable to reevaluate the need for annual boosters and possibly the amount of the booster dose . . . Although the record is unclear as to whether or not the Division requested the manufacturer to conduct a reevaluation, no such reevaluation has been done to date.[xv]

    Part of the problem may stem from the vaccine’s shot regimen, which consists of the first three shots given within 2 weeks of each other, and then another 3 shots spread out over the remainder of a year, for a total of 6 shots to complete the series, with annual boosters thereafter.

    The DoD’s media campaign, though, rising to over $70 million dollars spent for a website and other educational information for the troops, includes literature that says the anthrax vaccine “has been safely and routinely administered in the United States to veterinarians, laboratory workers, and livestock handlers for more than 25 years.”[xvi] An April 2000 Congressional House report noted, however, that “testimony at the March 24 hearing indicated between 100 and 300 civilians may receive the vaccine each year. Since approval, and prior to the AVIP, fewer than 68,000 doses had been distributed apart from stocks used in Operation Desert Storm.”[xvii] Shortly after the vaccine was licensed, the mills began closing as the garment industry changed. The risk of exposure and infection from anthrax spores by the general public disappeared. The vaccine’s use became limited to experiments on laboratory animals, the researchers conducting the experiments, and the staff at the manufacturing plant. Proof of this is that from its licensing until 1988, when the DoD sought to increase the production lines for it, only 68,000 doses of the vaccine had been produced by MDPH and MDPH had never made a lot of more than 7500 doses at one time. If vaccination consists of six shots plus annual boosters, the number of possible persons inoculated is so small as to not even be statistically significant for long-term epidemiological studies. The 1985 Panel noted that “[t]he vaccine manufactured by the Michigan Department of Public Health has not been employed in a controlled field trial.”[xviii]

    Finally, there was never any effort to track long-term health effects from those who received the vaccine. There was no database maintained or other central records kept to track an individual’s long-term reactions to the vaccine. The Institute of Medicine conducted a review of all available literature and concluded that “[t]here is a paucity of published peer-reviewed literature on the safety of the anthrax vaccine.”[xix] It also noted that “[t]here have been no studies of the anthrax vaccine in which the long-term health outcomes have been systematically evaluated with active surveillance.”[xx] At no time in the history of the anthrax vaccine did their exist, or has their existed, support for the DoD’s claims of “an impressive safety record.” In truth, the DoD’s claims are particularly hollow and appear to be part of a campaign of disinformation. As a Congressional Committee noted in April 2000, “[p]reposterously low adverse report rates generated by DOD point to a program far more concerned with public relations than effective force protection or the practice of medicine.”

    The vaccine’s licensed product insert expresses an expected systemic adverse reaction rate of 0.2 %. In May, 1999, the Department of Defense reported a total of 123 Vaccine Adverse Events Report System (VAERS) filings with the FDA, but included only 65 of those in the calculation of an adverse reaction rate of 0.007 percent of 890,888 vaccinations given to that date. This means one of two things: either the vaccine is more safe than the product label indicates by a factor of 100, or the data is being underreported. Under pressure to conduct at least some studies, the DoD has done so and those studies have suggested much higher adverse reaction rates than the PR claims. In a study at Tripler Army Hospital, Hawaii, the data showed that 2.2% of men missed one or more shifts of duty after the first shot, 2.0% after the second, and .9% after the third. For women, the numbers were higher, consistent with other studies conducted. Women in the Tripler study indicated rates of 5.5%, 5.0%, and 3.9% for the first second and third shots, respectively.[xxi] A study on soldiers in Korea on systemic reactions also revealed significantly higher adverse reaction rates. Men and women were surveyed regarding symptoms of fever, malaise, and chills. In each of these categories, the numbers reflect numbers that are in some cases 1000 times higher than what DoD has testified to before Congress or stated in press releases. The Korea study’s numbers for men and women after the first shot are:

    Fever – 0.9 % men, 2.8% women; Malaise – 6.0% men, 15.6% women; Chills – 1.5% men, 5.5% women. Second shot systemic reaction rates are similar or higher.[xxii]  What is disturbing about these numbers is not the adverse report rates themselves; the most disturbing thing is that DoD had similar numbers from a survey taken of soldiers inoculated from 1977-1996 at Fort Detrick, Maryland.[xxiii] This means that the DoD has had similar adverse reaction rates the whole time it has been claiming publicly that the vaccine has the “preposterously low” rates that they have been reporting. Completely provable lies.

    The problems with the anthrax vaccine are not mere quibbling, but rather raise significant questions about how this vaccine is made, its component parts, and the actual lots that are currently sitting on the shelf at the manufacturer’s facility, ready to be shipped or already shipped to the DoD for use on service members.[2]

    Endnotes

    [1] See Chapter 5, pp. 48-50.

    [2] I would remiss if I did not give credit to the research conducted by Major Russ Dingle, USAFR, whose knowledge about the anthrax vaccine manufacturing process is encyclopedic in its breadth and depth. Any errors are entirely mine.

    [i] Wright, GG. Et al. Studies on Immunity in Anthrax. The Journal of Immunology. Vol. 73 No. 6 pp387-391

    [ii] Brachman. P.S. et al. Field Evaluation of a Human Anthrax Vaccine. American Journal of Public Health. Vol. 52 pp. 632-645

    [iii] A.M Friedlander and P.S. Brachman, “Vaccines”, ed. Plotkin and Mortimer, 1994 edition chapter 26, pg. 737.

    [iv] Pubis, M. Wright, GG. Anaerobic Process for Production of a Gel-adsorbed Anthrax Immunization Antigen. United States Patent Office Record. September 28, 1965. page 1471

    [v] Philip Coleman, Acting Chief, Investigational Vaccines Activity , letter to Division of Biologics Standards, National Institutes of Health, 25 January 1968.

    [vi] Ad Hoc Committee letter to Dr. Margaret Pittman, 6 February 1969.

    [vii] Dr. Margaret Pittman, letter to Dr. Sam Gibson, 10 February 1969.

    [viii] HEW memorandum from Margaret Pittman to Reference No. file 67-70. 2 November 1970.

    [ix] Conversation with Mr. Sammie Young, former Director of Biologics Division of the FDA.

    [x] 21 C.F.R. 51002, 51008

    [xi] Id.

    [xii] Id.

    [xiii] DoD Press Briefing, Dec. 5, 1997.  Available at http://www.defenselink.mil/news/  then follow links to 1997 archives.

    [xiv] 21 C.F.R. 51002, 51008

    [xv] GAO Report T-NSIAD-00-48, Testimony of Dr. Kwai-Cheung Chan, Director, Special Studies and Evaluations, National Security and International Affairs Division

    [xvi] See note xii.

    [xvii] April 2000 Shays’ report, citing Prepared statement of Dr. Kathryn Zoon, Director, FDA Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, NSVAIR anthrax hearing (II), pp. 52-53.

    [xviii] 21 CFR 51002, 51008

    [xix] “An Assessment of the Safety of the Anthrax Vaccine”, A Letter Report, Committee on Health Effects Associated with Exposures During the Gulf War, Institute of Medicine, 30 Mar 2000

    [xx] Id.

    [xxi] GAO Report, T00-48, Table 3.

    [xxii] GAO Report T00-48, Table 2.

    [xxiii] See GAO Report T-NSIAD-99-226, July 21, 1999.  Table below shows the results of Ft. Detrick study.

    Dose number Males percent (# of doses) Females % (# of doses)
    First 3.75 (1013) 3.86 (259)
    Second 3.06 (979) 7.29 (247)
    Third 1.71 (938) 5.06 (237)
    Fourth & Later 3.40 (5062) 7.06 (747)