I read somewhere that the EU has said 'no' to protection from lawsuits?
Anyone know about the claims of HCG "contamination" of vaccines in Africa (may have been India too)? Was that claim verified?
Regarding the EU, I heard the same thing. For whatever its faults, the EU made the right call on that one.
Regarding the contamination of vaccines, I heard that Bill Gates funded some vaccine testing in India, and multiple people - maybe in the hundreds...possibly alleged to be in the thousands, but I can't recall the exact number - died or became seriously ill or otherwise infected or in need of healthcare, as a result of a vaccine. It may have been an oral polio vaccine [rather than a needle-based one] or some other vaccine that is usually intramuscular, but was in pill form.
I went online to verify the story, and everyone was saying it was a conspiracy theory.
But here's the thing - if you test a vaccine on the children of 10,000 or 100,000 [or however many] of the poorest families in a developing nation, exactly WHO will advocate on behalf of those children and their families in the event of the vaccine causing medical issues?
And 2020 has taught me that strange things have happened - both this year, and throughout history at a level I just didn't deeply ponder, I suppose. Not only has this entire year been a statistical outlier like nothing I've ever seen before, I also learned that actual Hobbits used to exist on an island in Indonesia:
So...does this relate to Bill Gates and the Indian vaccine claim, and the subsequent online denial of his involvement?
Well...consider:
Is it REALLY so hard to believe that a person with the wealth and influence of Bill Gates would be able to have a "relatively safe" oral vaccine for a known intramuscular vaccine developed, and use his money to butter up a politician in India and have the vaccine tested on the poorest people in society, and do so by way of a series of shell companies and other measures, ultimately hiding his association with the eventual failed vaccine? Ok - so, say 284 people died.
284 people.
284 of the POOREST people, no less - the children of the poorest people, and probably children who were already sick, with poor parents who had six kids, and who were informed of the risks, and the potential for financial reward in case anything went wrong. And that would require, what, $2.84 million to pay each family in India $10,000 USD, in the case 284 children died?
So even though the Gates/India vaccine allegation is a "conspiracy theory", is it REALLY so "out there"?
Also consider - if Bill Gates develops a vaccine that can be produced cheaply and save a billion starving Black children in Africa, he will go down in history as a hero, by the Jewish media. I could see him looking at it morally like this: "These starving African children were going to die anyway - but if the vaccine works, I can save millions of lives [or...make a boatload more cash]."
So is it REALLY so impossible that something like this happened?
Again - who advocates on behalf of starving people, living on under $2 USD per day?
People in THE WEST aren't able to successfully sue pharmaceutical companies...is anyone REALLY going to worry about deaths they cause to the world's poorest people?
It just seems like a group that [1] can't afford to advocate for themselves, [2] no one really pays attention to, despite all the virtue-signalling about caring about those in extreme poverty, and [3] would be a group that could be tested on for vaccines that have the potential to save lives.
All of this sounds sick to me...but they test on animals, right? And eventually, drug companies start testing on people...it seems like doing this in Africa or India would be an easy way to test on humans without all of the red tape and regulatory delays that come with Western standards.
tl;dr.Yes.
No, but I heard a similar story about vaccine testing gone awry in India, involving Bill Gates.