By the the end of World War II, the government had amassed a massive arsenal of biological weapons (using anthrax and other various bacteria) -- all under the “strictest secrecy.” Soon, justification for continuing the research shifted to the “need for national defense.”
“Work in this field cannot be ignored in a time of peace,” Merck warned officials. “It must be continued on a sufficient scale to provide an adequate defense.”
Unsurprisingly, the government was convinced, and so, the research and experimentation continued. George W. Merck was even the recipient of several awards and was featured on the cover of Time Magazine during the summer of 1952. Albeit, readers were totally oblivious to his involvement in the development of biological weapons and the experimentation of such weapons on innocent citizens.
Even after Merck left the War Research Service, Ft. Detrick went on to become the epicenter of experimentation on American civilians, and one the most recognized centers of biological warfare development in U.S. history.
To put it simply, Ft. Detrick -- which was essentially Merck's creation -- was a place where very bad things happened. And to make matters worse, George W. Merck was running the nation's biological warfare efforts at the same time as his pharmaceutical company.
The company's ties to biological warfare are frightening enough even without their terrible track record of harming human beings with their products and lying about the efficacy and safety of their vaccines.
Sources include: WakingTimes.com Priceonomics.comMerck drops out of coronavirus vaccine development race
By Ramon Tomey // Share
Merck gives up trying to make coronavirus vaccine after total failure
By Ethan Huff // Share
Green tea and tai chi team up to protect bones
By newseditors // Share
Learn how to grow, harvest, and transform herbs into medicine
By ljdevon // Share
Measles outbreak sparks debate over vaccine efficacy and public health policy
By bellecarter // Share
California permanently enshrines assisted‑dying law
By patricklewis // Share
Taiwan unveils "T-Dome" air defense system amid rising Chinese military threats
By kevinhughes // Share