Politicians adore them and the public trust them. According to some at the Council of Europe however, scientists and politicians can be bought influenced. What a shock! Thenewamerican.com is reporting a proposed investigation by the Council of Europe into “faked pandemics”. I have no argument with this EXCEPT for the fact that from the wording in the motion, it appears that the blame is largely being placed on the “influencers”; the pharmeceutical companies. Assuming that the pharmeceutical companies actually did influence scientists and politicians in regards to the swine flu and other flu pandemics, shouldn’t the blame rest on the shoulders of those in positions of power and trust who deviated from standard principles of honesty and the pursuit of truth for the good of the people?
Faked Pandemics – a threat for health
In order to promote their patented drugs and vaccines against flu, pharmaceutical companies have
influenced scientists and official agencies, responsible for public health standards, to alarm governments
worldwide. They have made them squander tight health care resources for inefficient vaccine strategies and
needlessly exposed millions of healthy people to the risk of unknown side-effects of insufficiently tested
vaccines.
The “birds-flu“-campaign (2005/06) combined with the “swine-flu“-campaign seem to have caused a great
deal of damage not only to some vaccinated patients and to public health budgets, but also to the credibility
and accountability of important international health agencies. The definition of an alarming pandemic must
not be under the influence of drug-sellers.
The member states of the Council of Europe should ask for immediate investigations on the consequences
at national as well as European level.