The Silence is Deafening on the Biggest Story in the World - Neil Oliver
|
Time
Text
What is being alleged about the so-called vaccines is of monumental importance.
What Bridgen and Malhotra have claimed ought to be the biggest story in the country, in the world, and yet anyone interested in familiarising themselves with most of what was said has to go looking for it online.
Bridgen noted withdrawals of those other medical products when their safety was credibly questioned.
That's the world I thought we lived in, where doubt voiced in the face of credible research leads to the pausing of a course of action and a rethink.
And yet here we are, with peer-reviewed research demonstrating one in every hundred people receiving the Pfizer jab suffers a serious reaction, and medical professionals of unimpeachable credentials urging at least a pause in the rollout, if not a full and final stop.
And still, the government-sponsored adverts are everywhere, in the mainstream and online, inviting people of all ages to take even more of the same product.
Dr Malhotra said on this channel last week in relation to the Pfizer jab, quote, the original trial data, which was reanalyzed, suggested one was more likely to get serious adverse effects from the vaccine than one was to be hospitalized with Covid.
What does that mean?
It means if that is correct, which it seems to be, it should never have been approved in the first place.
Questions have been asked all over the world about blood clotting and any possible connection with the AstraZeneca product.
Countries across Europe have stopped using it and it's no longer being given to people under 30 in the UK.
It's worth noting that on Wednesday, Pascal Sauriot, Chief Executive Officer of AstraZeneca, was knighted by King Charles for services to life sciences in a ceremony at Windsor Castle.
All around the world, there is mounting evidence of deaths and injuries caused by the so-called vaccines.
There are more and more excess deaths.
People of all ages dying every day.
Deaths unrelated to Covid.
Pause for a moment to consider the following.
In the United States, in the second half of 2021, 61,000 Americans between the ages of 25 and 44 died of causes unrelated to Covid.
The death toll of the same age group during the decade-long Vietnam War was 58,000.
Here in the UK, at the start of the lockdown in 2020, in the week ending 23rd of March, there were 1,379 excess deaths.
In the week ending 23rd of March, there were 1,379 excess deaths.
In the week ending 21st October this year, the figure was 1,822.
There are more people dying every week now of causes unrelated to COVID than at the height of a pandemic.
Daily we were invited to look on in horror at the Covid death toll.
Where is the outrage about these latest deaths?
The round-the-clock coverage?
Dr. John Campbell, a regular contributor to this channel, said last month in relation to the ONS data regarding those excess deaths, there is something pretty horrible going on.
Over 1,800 deaths a week, more than we would expect, and it's been going on for a long time now, and we need an explanation.
What we get instead is the relentless continuation of the rollout, the push to get boosted.
Fauci in the US and others here in the UK say we're still in a pandemic.
If that's true, it's the longest lasting pandemic in modern history, much longer than the Spanish flu pandemic at the end of the First World War.
The concern being voiced now by Bridgen and Malhotra has been being shouted from the rooftops by many, many others for years.
For as long as we've had the products marketed as vaccines, there have been voices asking questions, and those were silenced, derided, ridiculed, reputations ruined.
Back in 1995, US physicist Carl Sagan demanded restless inquiry from all scientists.
Science requires an almost complete openness to all ideas, he said.
On the other hand, it requires the most rigorous and uncompromising scepticism.
And so how did we get to where we are now?
When did we set aside uncompromising scepticism and decide to live in a world in which we must, all of us, do precisely what we're told by our governments and their preferred experts, without ever raising so much as a questioning voice?
The chamber in which Bridgen made his speech was all but empty because, with a few exceptions, apparently none of the rest cared to listen to what he had to say about a course of action affecting tens of millions of lives here in the UK and billions around the world.
Let's give the devil his due.
Let's imagine many are daily in receipt of messages raising the alarm, but find their survival in the world of politics means they keep shtoom rather than rock the boat.
I hear from other journalists saying they're in contact with MPs, with medical professionals, with high-profile media types, all of whom have decided now to stay well clear of the so-called vaccines.
Some of those people have taken some jabs, some none.
But the fear of speaking out, the culture of silence in the face of what so many know to be an egregious wrong is enabling the narrative to persist largely unchallenged.
The behaviour of governments and corporations in the last two or three years has changed the world.
It might still look the same, more or less, but in all the ways that matter it has been altered.
Those who are awake to it all perceive a new reality and wonder how on earth they missed the signs for as long as they did.
That all but empty House of Commons said loud and clear that the powers that be, the allied powers of governments and corporations, no longer feel the need to be answerable in any meaningful way to the people.
Paradoxically, their absence from the chamber only made them more glaringly visible.
The willful blindness about the vaccines is just the tip of the iceberg.
Soaring excess deaths in all age groups.
The complicated truth of the war in Ukraine still not openly discussed.
The greatest transfer of wealth in the history of the world.
The wholesale erosion of our rights.
The nudge away from cash and towards central bank digital currencies.
People are freezing in their homes and turning to food banks in what has been a first world country.
Here's the thing, the near emptiness of that chamber was a moment of history, a warning about the future.
If our MPs don't care enough about harms to populations around the world to turn up and listen to one of their own, then it's time we reminded the whole damned lot of them that we are still here.
They might have their hands over their eyes, but we can see them.