Swine Flu panic and the Big Pharm Conspiracy!
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The reality
behind the
Swine Flu
conspiracy
By Irina Galushko
November 26th, 2009
Russia Today
ENTRYNEWS.COM
The message is clear –
we are all going to die
from swine flu.
It spreads fast,
it is dangerous,
and it must be feared –
says the World Health
Organization.
But worry not –
there is a way
to save yourself.
Just get a flu shot –
and purchase a remedy
for the deadly virus.
Those are the
instructions
from the WHO.
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However,
the WHO may find itself
coughing up explanations,
as more and more scientists
and health researchers,
and even journalists, are
starting to question the
organization’s motives
behind raising the alert
so quickly.
According to the Danish
Daily Information newspaper,
the WHO and pharmaceutical
companies are suffering from
the profit bug.
Or,
to put it simply,
the chief health care
organization in the world
has teamed up with the
drug makers to create a
phantom monster –
and to rake in cash
by selling a remedy for it.
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Plastered all over the front
pages and headlines news,
swine flu made its triumphant
entrance into limelight,
heralded as the
next “in” virus,
which threatened to bring
an end to humanity as
we know it.
Let’s stop right there
and talk numbers for
a little bit.
So far,
more than 3.5 million
people have been reported
to be infected with swine
flu worldwide.
More than 9,000 deaths
have been confirmed.
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In comparison:
every year,
up to one billion people get
infected with seasonal flu,
with up to 500 million deaths.
These numbers come from
the World Health Organization,
but they never make headline
news for some reason.
On June 11 of this year,
the WHO declared swine flu
a pandemic.
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But few know that,
right before doing that,
the Organization changed
its definition,
taking out the word
“deadly” from it.
Aleksander Saversky,
the chair of the Patient’s
Rights Protection League,
was one of those who
did pay attention.
He says it is clear that
the WHO dramatized the
situation around the
H1N1 virus.
In an interview to RT,
Saversky speculated that
it is due to the WHO’s
close ties with the world’s
major pharmaceutical
companies.
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And recently,
Danish journalists conducted
their own research,
which resulted in accusations
that the WHO,
and scientists who appear
to be independent are,
in fact,
on pharmaceutical
companies’ payroll.
Saversky points out that
the WHO declared the status
of pandemic when only
a few thousand people
were infected with it –
something that is
highly illogical,
he says,
considering the hundred
thousand more cases of
seasonal flu never gets
paid such high attention.
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____
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The virus was reported
to be extremely deadly.
Parallels were drawn
to the Spanish Flu,
which killed roughly 50
million people worldwide
in the span of six months.
As panic spread,
people rushed to
clinics for Tamiflu –
$145 a pop and by
prescription only in the US –
and for vaccinations,
which range anywhere
from $10 to $50.
And despite the fact
that many have lost their
jobs in the financial crisis,
and were left without
health insurance,
vaccinations and
pharmaceutical sales
skyrocketed.
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Nobody wants to die
a grisly death from the
supposedly new virus.
Aleksander Saversky
warns the hullaballoo
over swine flu is akin
to the fable of
“The Boy Who Cried Wolf.”
He says that,
because of this hype,
the next time a truly
dangerous virus comes about,
no one will take
any precautions.
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Fooled once already
by swine flu,
people will ignore the
warnings and fall prey to
a more dangerous –
and deadly virus.
In fact,
vaccinating people from
swine flu during the seasonal
flu outbreak,
in Saversky’s opinion,
is criminal.
People end up having to
battle two viruses at
the same time,
which puts an enormous
strain on the immune system.
Saversky puts the
blame on capitalism –
pharmaceutical companies
make billions on people’s fears,
combined with asymmetrical
information dispersal
(meaning that most people
know very little substantial
information about the virus,
whereas the WHO,
pharmaceutical companies
and researchers know
a lot more).
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So,
what’s to be done to
conquer the virus –
and stop the WHO?
Saversky says there
is one solution –
for governments worldwide
to step in and take matters
into their own hands,
by controlling healthcare
and pharmaceutical
production.
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Until that happens,
however,
remember to check for
all common flu symptoms.
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And should a general
disinclination to work of
any kind be among them,
rest assured –
it is most probably a
run-of-the-mill case
of the Monday Blues.
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