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The Wisconsin Legislature is considering Senate Joint Resolution 89, which would designate October as Vaccine Injury Awareness Month. This resolution, sponsored by Senator Steve Nass, recognizes the many individuals and families who have suffered from vaccine-related injuries and honors their experiences, courage, and advocacy.
While SJR 89 does not change state law, it carries important symbolic and educational value. By acknowledging that vaccine injuries occur and that informed consent in healthcare requires accurate and complete information, this resolution brings much-needed awareness to an issue that is too often ignored or dismissed.
If passed, SJR 89 would affirm the Wisconsin Legislature’s commitment to transparency, compassion, and truth in medicine. It encourages public dialogue about vaccine risks and safety, supports those who have been harmed, and reminds policymakers that medical freedom and informed consent are fundamental to public health ethics.
Vaccine Injury Awareness Month would also help educate the public about existing reporting and compensation systems, such as the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) and the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, both of which document and respond to vaccine-related harm.
This is a resolution of recognition, not regulation—a powerful opportunity to bring light to families whose suffering has too often been kept in the shadows.
Please take a few minutes to contact your Wisconsin legislators and urge them to SUPPORT SJR 89 to honor the vaccine-injured and promote awareness.
TAKE ACTION
Contact your Wisconsin state Senator and Assembly Member today and ask them to SUPPORT SJR 89.
You can look up your legislators here:
https://maps.legis.wisconsin.gov/
Phone calls are the most effective, but emails help too—both take just a few minutes!
Sample Script:
“Hi, my name is ____ and I am a constituent. I’m calling to ask Senator/Assembly Member ____ to SUPPORT SJR 89, which recognizes October as Vaccine Injury Awareness Month in Wisconsin.
This resolution honors individuals and families who have experienced vaccine injuries—people who are too often silenced, stigmatized, or ignored. It also emphasizes that informed consent in healthcare requires access to accurate and complete information about medical products, including vaccines.
Acknowledging vaccine injury does not mean being anti-vaccine—it means being pro-transparency and pro-compassion. Recognizing these families helps strengthen trust in medicine and ensures that no one’s suffering is denied or forgotten.
Please vote YES on SJR 89 to stand for awareness, informed consent, and the right of all Wisconsinites to make fully informed healthcare choices.”
TALKING POINTS
- You support SJR 89 because it acknowledges the reality of vaccine injury and honors those who have been affected.
- This resolution does not create new law or remove any vaccine requirements—it simply recognizes October as Vaccine Injury Awareness Month.
- Transparency and compassion build public trust; denial and censorship destroy it.
- Thousands of Wisconsinites have been impacted by vaccine injury, yet their stories are rarely heard or validated.
- The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) documents millions of reported vaccine injuries and adverse reactions nationwide.
- The National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) has awarded billions of dollars to individuals harmed by vaccines—proof that these injuries are real and recognized by the U.S. government.
- Informed consent is a cornerstone of ethical medicine. It cannot exist if patients and parents are denied access to full and accurate information.
- This resolution is about awareness, not opposition—it helps educate the public and policymakers alike about the real and human cost of vaccine injury.
MORE INFORMATION
Text, status, and history of SJR 89:
https://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/2025/proposals/reg/sen/joint_resolution/sjr89


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