
HPV Vaccine – You MUST read this
Is this the proof that the pseudo encyclopaedia Wikipedia is as bent as a paperclip?
Dr Vernon Coleman MB ChB
Human papilloma virus is a group of around 200 viruses (known generically as HPV) which are a common cause of infection. Sometimes the infection lasts for life without causing any symptoms. But HPV can cause warts and, more seriously, can cause cancer. A vaccine is, of course, available and is usually given to girls and boys. They claim it prevents cancer but a guy once sold me a car which he said was a good runner and had no rust. I believed him for twenty minutes until the engine blew up and my foot went through the floor when I pressed the brake pedal. Still, the nice drug companies wouldn’t lie, would they?
Naturally, the drug industry and the medical establishment (as closely allied as the two partners in a three legged race) assure everyone who is listening that the stuff works and that the risks are negligible.
Wikipedia, which can always be relied upon to demonise anyone telling embarrassing truths, and to ensure that its own pages offer the official, drug company or CIA approved line, says that HPV vaccines are `safe and well tolerated’.
Outside Wikipedia and the other official sources of propaganda, however, the enthusiasm for HPV vaccines is, to be polite, rather more muted. For example, Dr Arthur E Brawer, of the Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Monmouth Medical Center, USA is perhaps less enthusiastic than whoever wrote the Wikipedia article.
In a paper published in the Journal of Rheumatic Diseases and Treatment, Dr Brawer wrote: `Over the past five years clinicians from numerous countries have implicated human papillomavirus (HPV immunisations as the cause of diverse systemic ailments, egregious injuries and even death. Vaccine ingredients in Gardasil and Cervarix contain hidden organosiloxanes (organosilicones) and silica (silicon dioxide), all of which are capable of creating biochemical disturbances that are striking similar to the metabolic disruptions identified in both chronic fatigue syndrome and the recurrent public health debacle of silicone gel-filled breast implant toxicity.’
Dr Brawer concludes: `HPV vaccine-induced illness is a genuinely novel and legitimate entity unto itself that shares clinical features with the ever-expanding list of neurologic fatiguing syndromes. This illness is undoubtedly caused by multiple toxic disturbances of the body’s biochemistry induced by emulsifiers, surfactants, and immune-stimulatory complexes. HPV vaccine-induced illness is not a psychogenic reaction fueled by the news media and attorneys, nor is it one of primary autoimmune reactivity.’
And he adds: `In a recent publication of Ikeda and colleagues, new patients with HPV vaccine related ailments have not appeared after the Japanese Ministry of Public Health withdrew its vaccine recommendation more than four years ago.’
Remember what Wikipedia said: `The vaccine is `safe and well tolerated.’
It really is time that Wikipedia was closed down.
Arthur E. Brawer and Deborah H.Sullivan also wrote a paper entitled `The expanding cocktail of harmful ingredients in human papillomavirus vaccines’.
`Vaccination-induced disorders are a genuine reality that continue to generate intense controversy,’ begin the authors.
The list of side effects they have collected include: generalised pain, fatigue, muscle weakness, mood, sleep disturbances, lethargy, headaches, dizziness, vertigo, reduced alertness, tinnitus, hearing loss, motor neuron dysfunction, abnormal gait, adverse cardiovascular events, gastrointestinal complaints, cognitive dysfunction, tremors, seizures, metabolic disturbances and even sudden death.
Death is that nasty side effect that stops you complaining afterwards.
The two authors add: `It is becoming increasingly apparent that Gardasil vaccines contain a cocktail of harmful chemicals capable of producing dozens of biochemical disruptions in the body.’
According to the British Government, the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency received 9,909 UK spontaneous suspected adverse drug reaction reports associated with HPV vaccine from 18.2.07 to 18.2.22. Eight patients were reported to have died. (It should be noted that it is now generally accepted that the number of reports received is probably no more than 100th of the total since most doctors don’t bother to send in reports. So that would make 909,909 reports of drug reactions.) And that’s just in Britain.
Oh, and there is more.
Publications originating from Italy, Japan, Australia, Columbia, India, Ireland, Denmark, Mexico, Norway, Sweden, Canada, France, the USA and the UK have reported post HPV vaccination effects that share overlapping clinical features with chronic fatigue syndrome/myalgic encephalomyelitis, fibromyalgia, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, complex regional pain syndrome, small fiber neuropathy and autonomic dysfunction. There’s a list of symptoms that would make you dizzy and in need of a lie down.
Once again, it is difficult to understand why Wikipedia (which, let me remind you described the vaccines as `safe and well tolerated’) has not been closed down. At the very least the names, titles, experience and jobs of those writing for Wikipedia should be published.
The Wikipedia page dealing with the HPV vaccine was dated as having been last edited on 12th February 2026. Like all the (what I see as) dangerously one-sided junk on Wikipedia, as usual the page did not have an author’s name at the bottom or the top. Is it at all possible, I wonder, that the page might have at some stage been edited by someone with links to the drug companies making vaccines? Is that possible, perhaps?
Unless Wikipedia discovers and explores the mysteries of openness and honesty we’ll never know.
For the time being Wikipedia is neither `safe nor well tolerated’.
The internet would be a safer and better informed place if Wikipedia were closed down. Please go to my Substack page (CLICK HERE) and tick the heart button if you agree with me.
Copyright Vernon Coleman February 2026
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