WHO declared its fake to be over

13.08.2010: The World Health Organisation (WHO) tried to frighten billions of people all around the globe for more than one year with a false alarm. WHO succeeded to blow up a mild flu by making it appear a threatening "pandemic" and thus assisted the well prepared marketing strategies of vaccine producers to make their benefit. A short comment:

Concerning the end of the "pandemic" I have to repeat, that it was a faked pandemic and that this fraud was finally interrupted by those who started it.

I would be sad, if everyone now was just glad, that nothing serious happened or that we had "good luck". It is evident, that the world was betrayed by its most important health institution and this is the big damage for all people worldwide.

Influenza is not over and never was, but it is circulating every year in our rapidly globalizing populations and thus has to change its molecular surface to survive every year again. Influenza viruses are going to become our virological companions and the human immune system seems to get more and more acquainted to it.

The only danger could rise out of virological labs that try to spread newly recombined and dangerous species because of criminal reasons.

But even then we have to notice the fact, that a fast killing virus does not cause a pandemic so easily, because its hosts are immediately knocked out and have no power to travel, to go to work, to school or to a kindergarden and help the virus to spread.

There is a lot of criminal energy in the marketing methods of our big pharmaceutic companies and I hope our democratic institutions will be strong enough to stop that.

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  • EU negotiates in India on behalf of Big Pharma and trades away Access to Medicines10.02.2011 | An alarming blog by Els Torreele, the Director of the Access to Essential Medicines Initiative of the Open Society Public Health Program:
    Recent news reports on negotiations between India and the European Union on a proposed free trade agreement (FTA) have many health and human rights experts worried that millions of people may be left without access to life-saving medicines. Indeed people in low-resource countries are critically dependent on affordable medicines produced by India, which for that reason has been dubbed the “pharmacy of the developing world.” If, as reports indicate, EU negotiators succeed in pressuring India to beef up intellectual property protection at the expense of public access rights for life-saving drugs, the FTA would seriously undercut India’s ability to produce generic, low-cost drugs, with detrimental effects on access to medicines for the developing world. mehr »