The information you are passing on is vital. The segment by Jeff Rense was quite worrying, but I note the discussion of heritability was not biologically correct.
While DNA can be inserted into our genes via viral vectors, the genetic changes would be localized to the particular sites where cells accepted the virii. Since we have trillions of cells, it would take cups of virii to transform all our cells, and one injection, or even a series of shots, just wouldn't contain enough to completely saturate our bodies with the virus.
Since our eggs are fully made before we're born, a woman, even one whose gonads were altered this way, wouldn't pass it on to her children. Unless a man's reproductive tissues, particularly his stones, were transformed, his sperm wouldn't be altered either.
It's unlikely, unless the injection of the vaccine was directly into the testicles, that such genetic changes could be passed on. Since women's eggs are all formed before she is born, it is impossible for a woman to pass genetic alterations on, unless her eggs are targeted directly, which is not something that could be done via injection.
Thanks!