Weinstein: The other problem is that what these vaccines do is they encode spike protein… but the spike protein itself we now know is very dangerous, it's cytotoxic, is that a fair description? Malone: More than fair, and I alerted the FDA about this risk months and months and months ago.In another moment, entrepreneur and funder of fluvoxamine studies Steve Kirsch mentioned that his carpet cleaner had a heart attack minutes after taking the Pfizer vaccine, and cited Canadian viral immunologist Byram Bridle in saying that that the COVID-19 vaccine doesn’t stay localized at point of injection, but "goes throughout your entire body, it goes to your brain to your heart." Politifact rated the claim that spike protein is cytotoxic "false," citing the CDC to describe the spike protein as "harmless." As to the idea that the protein does damage to other parts of the body, including the heart, they quoted an FDA spokesperson who said there’s no evidence the spike protein "lingers at any toxic level in the body." Would many doctors argue that the 226 identified cases of myocarditis so far is tiny in the context of 130 million vaccine doses administered, and overall the danger of myocarditis associated with vaccine is far lower than the dangers of myocarditis in Covid-19 patients? Absolutely. It’s also true that the CDC itself had a meeting on June 18th to discuss cases of heart inflammation reported among people who’d received the vaccine. The CDC, in other words, is simultaneously telling news outlets like Politifact that spike protein is "harmless," and also having ad-hoc meetings to discuss the possibility, however remote from their point of view, that it is not harmless. Are only CDC officials allowed to discuss these matters? The larger problem with YouTube’s action is that it relies upon those government guidelines, which in turn are significantly dependent upon information provided to them by pharmaceutical companies, which have long track records of being less than forthright with the public. In the last decade, for instance, the U.S. government spent over $1.5 billion to stockpile Tamiflu, a drug produced by the Swiss pharma firm Roche. It later came out — thanks to the efforts of a Japanese pediatrician who left a comment on an online forum — that Roche had withheld crucial testing information from British and American buyers, leading to a massive fraud suit. Similar controversies involving the arthritis drug Vioxx and the diabetes drug Avandia were prompted by investigations by independent doctors and academics. As with financial services, military contracting, environmental protection, and other fields, the phenomenon of regulatory capture is demonstrably real in the pharmaceutical world. This makes basing any moderation policy on official guidelines problematic. If the proper vaccine policy is X, but the actual policy ends up being X plus unknown commercial consideration Y, a policy like YouTube’s more or less automatically preempts discussion of Y. Some of Weinstein’s broadcasts involve exactly such questions about whether or not it’s necessary to give Covid-19 vaccines to children, to pregnant women, and to people who’ve already had Covid-19, and whether or not the official stance on those matters is colored by profit considerations. Other issues, like whether or not boosters are going to be necessary, need a hard look in light of the commercial incentives. These are legitimate discussions, as the WHOs own behavior shows. On April 8th, the WHO website said flatly: "Children should not be vaccinated for the moment." A month and a half later, the WHO issued a new guidance, saying the Pfizer vaccine was "suitable for use by people aged 12 years and above." The WHO was clear that its early recommendation was based on a lack of data, and on uncertainty about whether or not children with a low likelihood of infection should be a "priority," and not on any definite conviction that the vaccine was unsafe. And, again, a Politifact check on the notion that the WHO "reversed its stance" on children rated the claim false, saying that the WHO merely "updated" its guidance on children. Still, the whole drama over the WHO recommendation suggested it should at least be an allowable topic of discussion. Certainly there are critics of Weinstein’s who blanch at the use of sci-fi terms like "red pill" (derived from worldview-altering truth pill in The Matrix), employing language like "very dangerous" to describe the mRNA vaccines, and descriptions of ivermectin as a drug that would "almost certainly make you better." Even to those critics, however, the larger issue Weinstein’s case highlights should be clear. If platforms like YouTube are basing speech regulation policies on government guidelines, and government agencies demonstrably can be captured by industry, the potential exists for a new brand of capture — intellectual capture, where corporate money can theoretically buy not just regulatory relief but the broader preemption of public criticism. It’s vaccines today, and that issue is important enough, but what if in the future the questions involve the performance of an expensive weapons program, or a finance company contracted to administer bailout funds, or health risks posed by a private polluter? Weinstein believes capture plays a role in his case at some level. "It's the only thing that makes sense," he says. He hopes the pressure from the public and from the media will push platforms like YouTube to reveal exactly how, and with whom, they settle upon their speech guidelines. "There's something industrial strength about the censorship," he says, adding. "There needs to be a public campaign to reject it." Read more at: Taibbi.Substack.com and Censorship.news.
Wikipedia’s co-founder says he no longer trusts the site he helped create
By Cassie B. // Share
Senior FBI official took free gifts from media while Trump-Russia probe was underway, watchdog says
By News Editors // Share
Evidence points to VOTER FRAUD in 2024 Wisconsin Senate race
By ethanh // Share
Trump picks pro-war Zionist shill Pete Hegseth as Defense Secretary
By ethanh // Share
Undersea internet cable sabotage could unleash a worldwide disaster
By isabelle // Share