GATES FOUNDATION FORCING CONTRACEPTIVE ON BLACK WOMEN
June 13, 2016
injection for birth control (Depo Provera) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
In Africa and America- Shot causes cancer and makes patient more susceptible to HIV
This is what you get when you take a Billionaire and allow him, with YOUR money to become a Communist-Fascist Thug!
(NaturalNews) It has been on the U.S. drug market since the early 1990s, and population control organizations like Planned Parenthood continue to push it heavily on black women and other ethnic minorities as a form of contraception. But the injectable contraceptive drug Depo-Provera, manufactured by Pfizer, has an extensive track record of causing serious harm to women, including its tendency to trigger the development of cancer.
Most people are unaware of this and many of the other long-term side effects of Depo-Provera, because eugenics groups like Planned Parenthood erroneously claim the drug is "safe, effective and convenient." But the non-profit Rebecca Project for Human Rights (RPHR) recently issued a groundbreaking report outlining the adverse effects of this insidious birth control shot, which currently bears a "black box warning" issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) back in 2004.
This warning clearly states that women who receive Depo-Provera could develop significant and irreversible bone mineral density loss, for instance. The drug can also lead to blood clots in arms, legs, lungs and eyes and may also cause stroke, bleeding irregularities, weight gain, ectopic pregnancy and delayed return to fertility. In some cases, women who get jabbed with Depo-Provera become permanently sterile.
Perhaps most concerning is the fact that Depo-Provera has been shown to more than double a woman's risk of developing breast cancer. A 2012 study out of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle found that, compared to women who had never received a Depo-Provera shot, jabbed women were about 220 percent more likely to develop the disease, regardless of their family and medical histories.