My local paper, the Ventura County Star (part of the USA Today network), recently published an article with the headline: “Teachers in Simi Valley get their first shot at COVID-19 Immunity”.
Wait a minute, that seems weird because Dr. Anthony Fauci is telling us that the “vaccines” have no impact on a person’s immunity to the disease.
Then I read more. The article began: “Hundreds of teachers and school staff got their shot at greater immunity at a pop-up COVID-19 vaccine clinic Saturday…”.
WTF?
If the “vaccines” don’t provide someone with any increase in their ability to not contract COVID-19, then isn’t it purposely misleading to tell people that the shot will increase their immunity to the disease? A more truthful headline would have read, “Gullible teachers get injected with an untested, experimental drug”.
How can someone get away with purposely misleading the public? The ability to do so depends on who you are.
Let’s say that I wanted to make my own product to boost people’s immune systems. So, I took some vitamin D and zinc and mixed them together and made an elixir. Then I put on the label that my concoction would increase your immunity to disease. That would be OK. Because studies have long proven that your immune system can benefit if you take vitamin D and zinc.
But, what if I put on the label that my proprietary formula would give people immunity against COVID-19? Well, that would be illegal. Because, while vitamin D and zinc do strengthen your immune system, there are no long-term studies that prove that the combination of vitamin D and zinc are specifically effective against COVID-19.
Saying that my elixir provides such a benefit is intentionally misleading. And, it turns out that the Federal Trade Commission frowns on people claiming products provide medical benefits that they don’t actually provide. So, claiming that my elixir was going to prevent people from contracting COVID-19 would likely put me in jail. Furthermore, if you started selling my elixir and made the same misleading claims, you could also end up in jail.
Now, most people who take my elixir are going to be just fine. There may be some minor side effects and some people may develop a slight zinc toxicity. As elixirs go, mine would be fairly benign. For most people, my elixir will neither harm nor benefit them.
But let’s say that, for whatever reason, 966 people died after taking my elixir. What do you think would happen? I’ll tell you what would happen. I would be arrested and charged with, at the very least, 966 counts of manslaughter. I would be convicted on multiple counts and I would go to jail for a very long time. Then, the families of the people killed by my elixir would sue me for every penny I have. And they would win.
That’s just a story I made up about an elixir that doesn’t exist. But I’m using it to make a point.
I could go to jail for saying something that hasn’t been proven but is likely true. However, Big Media can make false claims of “immunity” all they want without a single repercussion. Continuously calling something that doesn’t provide any level of immunity a “vaccine” is intentionally misleading and is, unless you’re Big Pharma, illegal.
If my elixir accidentally kills someone, I’d be criminally and financially liable for each death. Thus far, 966 people in the United States have died after being injected with a COVID-19 vaccine. So, clearly someone is going to jail, right?
Nope. Big Pharma, has been granted blanket immunity for anything related to fast-tracking an experimental drug to market, effectively giving them a magic “get out of jail free” card. Well, technically, their card is better than that because they’ll never go to jail in the first place. Cases against them won’t even make it to court. But, if my combination of two well-known dietary supplements accidentally causes a death, I go to jail.
It’s ironic the people who are responsible for creating the drugs that have caused nearly 1,000 deaths have been granted immunity from prosecution, but those same drugs which are claimed to provide immunity do no such thing.
Though it is nice to see that the drugs are at least providing immunity to someone.
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