State Sen. Janae Shamp (R-Surprise) and Dr. Peter McCullough | https://www.azleg.gov/senate-member/?legislature=56&legislator=2141 https://www.linkedin.com/in/petermcculloughmd/overlay/photo/
State Sen. Janae Shamp (R-Surprise) and Dr. Peter McCullough | https://www.azleg.gov/senate-member/?legislature=56&legislator=2141 https://www.linkedin.com/in/petermcculloughmd/overlay/photo/
Following a recently-published study which found that people vaccinated against COVID-19 have a higher risk of premature death from other causes, Ariz. State Sen. Janae Shamp, BSN, RN (R-Surprise) said that ongoing vaccination efforts are “a crime against humanity.”
“Widespread distribution and usage of COVID-19 vaccines, combined with a high number of adverse event reports, including death, became a major cause of concern for not only those getting the vaccination, but also within the medical community. The evidence has proven these injections are not ‘safe and effective’ and the fact that they are still being pushed on the people, especially children, is a crime against humanity,” Shamp said.
Shamp’s comments are in response to an Italian study titled, “A Critical Analysis of All-Cause Deaths during COVID-19 Vaccination in an Italian Province," which was conducted by Marco Alessandria, Giovanni M. Malatesta, Franco Berrino and Alberto Donzell, and published on June 30.
The study analyzed National Healthcare System data on residents or those domiciled in the Italian province of Pescara between Jan. 1, 2021 and Feb. 15, 2023, concluding that “we should admit that vaccination increases the risk of death from causes other than COVID-19, or by direct damage (adverse effects), or by indirect damage e.g., to the immune system.”
Shamp, Vice-Chair of the of the Arizona Senate’s Health and Human Services Committee, presided over the Novel Coronavirus Southwestern Intergovernmental Committee – a body which examined COVID-19 response strategies over a series of hearings held in the Arizona State Capitol in May 2023, October 2023 and this past March.
“[With] the COVID-19 vaccines in the United States, 94% of Americans took an mRNA vaccine. It is the genetic code for the potentially-lethal spike protein [that is] part of the virus. It was the worst idea ever to install the genetic code by injection, and allow unbridled production of a potentially-lethal protein in the human body for an uncontrolled duration of time. Everything we’ve learned about the vaccines since they’ve come out is horrifying,” Dr. Peter McCullough, an epidemiologist and cardiologist, said during the October hearing.
McCullough responded to the study on Substack account titled “Courageous Discourse.”
“The main point of the paper is that COVID-19 vaccination did not ‘save lives’ as so many in Washington have proclaimed without evidence. The trend was for multiple vaccine doses to increase COVID-19 mortality and there was an important signal for increased all-cause death with one or two doses,” McCullough said, in part.
McCullough – the former vice chief of internal medicine at Baylor University Medical Center and a former professor at Texas A&M University, who “has more than 1,000 publications and 660 citations in the National Library of Medicine, according to Yavapai News – attended the Novel Coronavirus Southwestern Intergovernmental Committee hearings as a featured speaker, and provided testimony to the committee.
Shamp was first elected to represent Arizona’s 29th Legislative District in Nov. 2022. She defeated Democrat David Raymer, winning 59 percent to Raymer’s 41 percent.
A resident of Surprise, Shamp graduated cum laude from Arizona State University and received her nursing degree, also graduating cum laude, from Grand Canyon University.
She is an operating room nurse, and said she was fired from her nursing position for refusing to take the “COVID” MRNA injection.
Arizona’s 29th Legislative District is entirely located within Maricopa County, west and northwest of Phoenix. The district stretches from Litchfield Park in the south to north of Morristown in the north, stopping to the east of Wickenburg. It includes Luke Air Force Base.