I don’t know why, but this fetal tissue thing reminds me of 1857 when the rumor spread around India that the British were using a mixture of pig fat and beef fat to soak the paper that held the powder for the muskets, which the sepoys (soldiers) would have to bite off with their teeth (same as our Civil War muskets) to pour the powder down the muzzle. The Brits were as concerned with minority relations then as now, and they immediately denied the allegations and set up a board to investigate. Well it turned out it was true, and it set off the Great Mutiny of 1857 in which uncounted perished, mostly Indian Hindus and Muslims.
Forcing people to take into their bodies that which is anathema to them.
Vaccines made from fetal material is a proven fact. Here is an article from Life Site news regarding mandatory vaccines for Illinois school aged children.
The bill didn’t pass due to the Covid-19 shutdown, but no doubt will reintroduced in the 2021 Illinois General Assembly.
EXCERPT:
While the media often fixate on parents who oppose vaccines over their potential to injure children who receive them, they tend to overlook another group that supports vaccines in general while having an ethical conflict with vaccines derived from aborted babies’ cells.
The U.S. Food & Drug Administration currently approves a number of vaccines produced using two cell lines, MRC-5 and WI-38, obtained from 1960s-era elective abortions. Some families choose not to vaccinate their children against certain diseases because the only vaccines available for them in the U.S. are derived from these lines.
Ethical alternatives do exist and could resolve the problem. “Measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines can all be produced in non-fetal cell lines,” molecular biologist and Charlotte Lozier Institute scholar Dr. Tara Sander Lee told Congress in December 2018. “The measles vaccine is produced in chicken eggs, human amnion cells from term placentas, and human kidney cultures from surgical samples[.] … Fetal cell lines are still in use today in the U.S. However, an ethical alternative is available in Japan.”