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The Covid Inquiry Calling the Vaccines “Safe and Effective” is Like the Post Office Inquiry Calling Horizon “Reliable”

by Ben Kingsley and Molly Kingsley
11 February 2025 1:01 PM

Module Four of the Covid Inquiry has just ended. Its brief and highly-curated existence has confirmed for us all that not only is the inquiry studiously avoiding any confrontation with the most contentious issues of the Covid period, it also appears knowingly to be facilitating the creation of a false record of some core aspects of that period.

It has been conspicuous for some time that the inquiry is determined to swerve topics such as the harm versus benefit equation for lockdowns; the integrity of the vaccine trials; the net benefit, safety and efficacy of the Covid vaccines; the ethics of vaccinating children for the benefit of adults; the role of censorship, propaganda and coercion; and relatedly, the manifest absence of informed consent in the Covid vaccination programme.

All of these critical topics have either been sidestepped or ruled beyond the scope of the inquiry. More corrosively, though, in a number of ways the inquiry appears to be allowing and at times even encouraging the creation of a false record.

Rubber-stamping rather than interrogating complex topics

There are some issues which, although technically within scope for the inquiry, have been given only a superficial airing with no meaningful scrutiny. 

Two striking examples concern the role of ethics in decision-making and the Government’s decision to roll out the Covid vaccine to children.

The topics of ethics and ethical frameworks have been referenced only briefly and in passing throughout the inquiry to date, but the questions posed in Module Four conspicuously have failed even to scratch the surface of the many serious ethical violations involved in the vaccine rollout process, including coercive policies, the frustration of informed consent and medicating children to mitigate a policy decision (not a medical decision) to close schools.

Indeed, across all four modules to date, the inquiry has failed to ask a single question about the fact that official meeting records of the Government’s expert ethics advisory committee (MEAG) show that its criticisms of key policies, including in summer 2021 when plans to vaccinate healthy children against Covid came to a head, were suppressed or ignored before the committee was abruptly demobilised.

Likewise, the highly unorthodox and unprecedented decision of the Chief Medical Officers in September 2021 to approve the mass vaccination of children over the heads of the JCVI has been mentioned only so that it could be rubber-stamped by the inquiry as necessary and uncontroversial. The Inquiry would have us believe that there is nothing to see, no questions to be asked of these highly consequential events. That is manifestly not the case.

Establishing flawed presumptions

The inquiry has itself created – and has allowed witnesses to buttress – flawed evidential presumptions that in some cases go to the very heart of the issues that ought to be investigated if meaningful lessons are to be learned. For example, at the outset of Module Four, Hugo Keith KC anchored all of his subsequent interrogations with a series of highly-contested or outright fallacious assertions, including these (emphasis added):

“The overall process by which the MHRA ensured that… all of the vaccines authorised [by it for temporary emergency use]… were effective and acceptably safe, was no different in substance to the process that would have applied had those applications been made… for full marketing authorisations.”

“The absolutely clear expert opinion of the [single expert] instructed by the inquiry… is that the vaccines, those three COVID-19 vaccines, were entirely effective.”

“My Lady, empirically, it is beyond argument that vaccinated people were far less likely to get COVID-19 with symptoms.”

“I must emphasise the rarity, more often the extreme rarity, of the serious adverse effects that were suffered, and the fact that the figures demonstrate beyond any doubt that the life-saving benefits of the UK COVID-19 vaccines vastly outweighed the very rare risk of a serious side-effect.”

Though the inquiry had declared at the outset that it was not competent to address questions of the safety or risk-benefit of the Covid vaccines, instead of not taking a position on these important and contentious topics, the inquiry has presumed, or allowed to be presumed, answers which only support the official narrative — such as that the Covid vaccines were entirely effective.

This matters greatly because, self-evidently, conclusions reached on the basis of a false or unreliable presumption are themselves unreliable and quite possibly false.

It would be as if the Post Office Inquiry had started its process by stating a presumption that the Horizon system was entirely reliable, and that any errors could only have been the result of extremely rare glitches: clearly, such an assumption would have undermined the entirety of the inquiry’s subsequent interrogation of the evidence.

Failing to contemplate uncomfortable realities

There are areas in which the inquiry has been undeniably one-sided or partisan in its outlook. This has been very evident in its consideration of the effects of mis- and dis-information on the vaccination programme.

The inquiry has anchored its analysis with a presumption that it was only commentary challenging official public health messages or critical of the Government’s policy decisions that was capable of being mis- or dis-information. It has not even contemplated the uncomfortable possibility that mis- and dis-information might have originated with vaccine manufacturers, public health officials or the Government.

This alarming myopia — whether negligent or intentional — is all the more striking when one considers that, since 2020, there have been a staggering 16 adverse regulatory judgments (at least) against the main UK Covid vaccine manufacturers in relation to their vaccine products, with the industry regulator, the PMCPA, publishing a litany of damning findings including that manufacturers have:

  • propagated misleading information and made unsubstantiated claims about the safety of their Covid vaccines;
  • published misleading information about the efficacy of those vaccines;
  • promoted unlicensed uses of those vaccines; and
  • paid unlawful financial inducements to promote their vaccines.

Leaving false or misleading evidence unchallenged

The inquiry has, we believe, also allowed witnesses knowingly or recklessly to record false evidence. This is a serious allegation, but one which appears to be supported by the transcripts. To give just two examples:

Hugo Keith KC asked a series of leading questions to Professor Lim Wei Shen KBE, the Acting Chair of the JCVI during the Covid period, on the topic of the JCVI’s controversial decision to not recommend vaccination for 12 to 15 year olds in September 2021.

Hugo Keith: And so in that risk-benefit analysis, as you said earlier, between the marginal benefits of vaccination against the very rare but not to be ignored risk of myocarditis, was it a more difficult balance to draw?

Witness: It was a very difficult balance, a hugely fine balance, quite unlike the balance of an older person who might have an adverse effect from vaccination.

Hugo Keith: Do you also consider in the balance, health inequalities, Long Covid, the impact on mental health of children and young persons of being vaccinated or not being vaccinated, as well as the ethics?

Witness: Correct. We consider all those things.

Those leading questions elicited a definitive confirmation that the JCVI considered, among other things, the ethics of extending the vaccination programme to children. This appears flatly to contradict official records both of the JCVI’s meetings to discuss the vaccination of 12 to 15 year olds (which are extensive but contain not one mention of ethics) and of an earlier JCVI meeting (held on May 7th 2020) which had discussed the role of MEAG and ethics, and recorded that:

The Committee agreed that JCVI advice would be based on scientific principles from the available scientific evidence and this would not include detailed ethical considerations which were for DHSC to consider, informed by MEAG.

And on the same topic of the Covid vaccine’s rollout to children, when explaining the CMOs decision to proceed with the rollout, Sir Chris Whitty had earlier misdescribed the JCVI’s advice as characterising the risks of vaccinating children aged 12 to 15 as being “even smaller” than the marginal benefits at an individual child level.  

What the JCVI in fact had said — and it seems highly improbable that both Chris Whitty and the inquiry’s lawyers had not read that advice in preparing for his evidence session — was that “the [JCVI] is of the opinion that the benefits from vaccination are marginally greater than the potential known harms but acknowledges that there is considerable uncertainty regarding the magnitude of the potential harms” (emphasis added).

In each of these situations a witness has been allowed by the inquiry to carelessly or knowingly give flawed or false evidence to the inquiry in relation to a critical safeguarding matter of significant public interest. These are but two examples of a growing list that we are compiling.

Prohibiting inconvenient questions – and answers

At many times throughout its hearings to date, including during Module Four, the inquiry has tightly controlled the proceedings and appears to have prohibited inconvenient questions from being asked, or answers given.

It was conspicuous, for example, that when AstraZeneca was called to give oral evidence, not one of the core participants had been given time to ask questions — are we to believe that none had any questions?

Two stark examples of the latter, both concerning topics of significant relevance for the inquiry, occurred in relation to the topics of lockdown harms and benefits and censorship. 

When in Module Two Rishi Sunak MP, at the time Prime Minister, broached the subject of a QALY (quality adjusted life years) analysis of the first lockdown and commented that the lockdown “in its severity and duration was likely to have generated costs that are greater than the likely benefit”, he was immediately closed down by Hugo Keith KC, who replied that “we’re not interested in QALYs”.

Similarly, when Michael Gove MP in the same module attempted to raise the question of the lab leak theory, saying “there is a significant body of judgement that believes that the virus itself was man-made”, he was promptly cut off by Hugo Keith KC who intervened, bluntly: “It forms no part of the terms of reference of this inquiry to address that somewhat divisive issue, so we’re not going to go there.”

Conclusions

Module Four has perhaps more than any other module so far revealed the flaws which permeate this inquiry and which will compromise almost any finding it may ultimately make. 

Imagine a Post Office Inquiry in which, in addition to assuming at the outset that the Horizon IT system had been infallible, the Chair ruled as off-limits any questioning of the reliability of that IT system; in which anyone who had historically questioned the reliability of the system, or the motivations of Post Office executives and prosecutors, was presumed to be an irredeemable spreader of disinformation; in which examples of false evidence were allowed to become embedded as a matter of public record; and in which lawyers for the sub-postmasters were not permitted an opportunity to pose questions to Fujitsu executives.

Yet this bizarrely Kafkaesque image reflects the reality of the Covid Inquiry. Not only can we not hope to learn lessons of any value from a public inquiry so lacking in curiosity and critical thinking, and so beset by fanatical adherence to a pre-conceived story of the UK’s Covid experience, but in allowing inaccurate testimony to stand unchallenged and by promoting flawed and false presumptions, the inquiry will create a false record that risks distorting public health policy for decades.

Molly Kingsley is a founder and Ben Kingsley is the Head of Legal Affairs at children’s rights campaign group UsForThem. Find UsForThem on Substack.

Tags: BiasCovid InquiryCOVID-19COVID-19 MisinformationDisinformationHugo Keith KCLockdownThe ScienceVaccine side-effectsVaccines

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29 Comments
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jeepybee
jeepybee
3 months ago

Dirty, lying, corrupt, evil, maggoty c*nts.

25
0
FerdIII
FerdIII
3 months ago
Reply to  jeepybee

Paid by Pharma. Pharma-CIA bought all the agencies, Pharm-ments and these £200 million circus-justifications for the Fascism.

Everyone involved made money. As if they will admit to criminal wrong-doing, stupidity, ignorance, or profess any critical thinking to stabbinations, ‘viruses’ or any of the protocols which killed and injured.

Criminals investigating themselves. In related news the SS could find no fault with the Gestapo. I wonder what Bridgen makes of this clown show.

19
0
Ron Smith
Ron Smith
3 months ago
Reply to  FerdIII

Fair play to Rupert Lowe, he said what a scandal the Lockdowns & jabs were, and he is the only MP (not AB is gone) who mentions the 1689 charter of rights.

15
0
Jack the dog
Jack the dog
3 months ago
Reply to  jeepybee

Quite so.

The main argument against an inquiry into the paki rape gangs is it might end up as uselessly time-consuming and expensively pointless as this one.

We need to take the hempen rope into our hands methinks.

And that will happen unless 2tk gets his act together and escapes from the student union and back to the real world where decisions matter and lives and livelihoods are at stake.

7
0
Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
3 months ago
Reply to  Jack the dog

Spot on about the Muslim rape gangs (did the vast majority of perpetrators originate from the same country as well as practicing the same religion?), although I’d say “will end up” rather than “might end up”. Much better to wait until 2029 and let Farrage set the terms of an inquiry.
Even if the vast majority of men in the rape gangs were Pakistani Muslim is still a better word to use since it was these bastards beliefs e.g. contempt for non Muslims and women that led them to believe that what they were doing was acceptable. Given the number of Somalis, for example, now in the UK how long before there’s a Somali rape gang? There’s never been a Polish rape gang because Poles have very different beliefs to Pakistanis

Last edited 3 months ago by Matt Dalby
3
0
D J
D J
3 months ago
Reply to  Matt Dalby

See Beistol convictions of Somali rape gang in 2014.
Must be a common thread,if I only I could work it out.
Still,as I’m not a KC Prime Minister I suppose I never will.

1
0
Art Simtotic
Art Simtotic
3 months ago

For complicity in orchestrating the cover up, better add Lady H to the Tier 2 list of nominees to appear in front of the International Criminal Court at The Hague.

Just a reminder of Tier 1: A is for A.B. De Pfeffel, B is for Assorted B’stards, all the way via H for Handcock, to V for UnVallanced (and for Van Tam), and W for UnWhittingly.

Last edited 3 months ago by Art Simtotic
14
0
Tonka Rigger
Tonka Rigger
3 months ago

Well, I don’t think any of us could have seen that coming.

It’s almost as if the whole inquiry is a sham, a purely performative exercise which was always intended to reach a predetermined conclusion justifying everything the government did and might similarly do in the future.

But that just simply couldn’t be the case, not in our honest and transparent democracy.

I’ll get me coat…

27
0
mikey49
mikey49
3 months ago

Re Hallet’s Wharehouse – now, as Madame Hallet and all those she employs to help her to service the government of the day get a well earned break from those labours. could she be prosecuted for “living off the earnings”, or is there some legal mechanism for closing down her wharehouse? Can we object to our taxes being used for immoral purposes?

10
0
mikey49
mikey49
3 months ago
Reply to  mikey49

After researching the origins and meaning of the word “whore” I find it can mean expensive, or “dear” (in the sense of the Irish Cara). I am confident the lady and her attendants fit both descriptions as far as the government(s) are concerned so in future I shall give the enquiry by the name it deserves. Hallet’s Whorehouse it is.

7
0
transmissionofflame
transmissionofflame
3 months ago

“The Covid Inquiry Calling the Vaccines “Safe and Effective” is Like the Post Office Inquiry Calling Horizon “Reliable””
That’s exactly what they would have done had they believed they could get away with it, but the cat was out of the bag and there were people who could be made scapegoats. With “covid” the entire establishment, globally, and billions of people, were enthusiasts for the “pandemic”. Nobody is going to get any thanks for reminding everyone of what a lot of people probably already know in their hearts – that it was a monstrous combination of folly and evil.

16
0
MajorMajor
MajorMajor
3 months ago

The whole enquiry is a sham.
The conclusions that the enquiry is going to reach were set before day 1.
The “evidence” will be tailored and filtered to support the conclusion.
Witnesses will have been cherry picked to fit the agenda.

It’s all a joke.
About as objective as a BBC documentary.

24
0
john ball
john ball
3 months ago

I was doubtful about contributing to their “Every Story Matters” but did so following a talk by Dr. Clare Craig when she recommnded that one should do so. One of my conclusions was that a long lasting result is that lots of people (myself included ) have lost any trust that may have previously had in the system/establishment

16
0
Hardliner
Hardliner
3 months ago

Kafka would be proud of Hallett and her henchpersons. Not least for their hourly billing rate of, shall we say, £500?

12
0
Ardandearg
Ardandearg
3 months ago

If My Lady is the Chair, she hasn’t got a leg to stand on.

5
0
Heretic
Heretic
3 months ago

Speaking of that discredited “Horizon” post office system, did you know that it has bizarrely been chosen to handle the new Banking Hubs being set up in all the towns where all the bank branches have been permanently shut down?

10
0
Bill Hickling
Bill Hickling
3 months ago

Baroness Wallet ploughs on regardless of the facts.

8
0
Jack the dog
Jack the dog
3 months ago
Reply to  Bill Hickling

Sums it up superbly well.

5
0
lulu-b45
lulu-b45
3 months ago

Hallett and Keith in particular should be ashamed of themselves for participating in this charade. Could it be for filthy lucre?

6
0
cogbill
cogbill
3 months ago

Ben and Molly – heroic and thank you. What they did to the kids (99.9% of who were at zero risk) should never be forgotten nor forgiven.

3
0
Matt Dalby
Matt Dalby
3 months ago

Calling Covid vaccines safe and effective is like calling Palestinians innocent victims of oppression and genocide.

3
0
RTSC
RTSC
3 months ago

The “Inquiry” has only one mission: to exonerate all the “Experts” who acted appropriately at all times …. and to blame Johnson for any failures.

1
0
Myra
Myra
3 months ago

So true. A complete waste of time and money.
On an aside, I asked ChatGPT about the Covid vaccines. It spouted the ‘safe and effective’ mantra, quoting the CDC. I challenged it and after asking several question it admitted that it’s first answer should have been a lot more nuanced….
I wonder how many times ChatGPT needs to be challenged to change it’s algorithm?

0
0
Less government
Less government
3 months ago

Looking forward to seeing Mr Hugo Keith and the rest of this despicable inquiry cabal at Nuremberg 2.

1
0
Gezza England
Gezza England
3 months ago
Reply to  Less government

I guess he will spout ‘I was only obeying the terms of the inquiry’ much like ‘I vas only obeying ze orders, Mine Hare’.

0
0
beaniebean
beaniebean
3 months ago

Excellent appraisal of this extremely expensive whitewash operation. To my mind it has brought the legal profession into serious disrepute which needs to be thoroughly investigated.

Last edited 3 months ago by beaniebean
1
0
SomersetHoops
SomersetHoops
3 months ago

Why are we wasting money on this corrupt enquiry which carefully steers away from truth and damage the vaccines, lockdowns and loss of personal freedom forced upon us by governments has caused. Shut it down now and if there is to be an enquiry, remove from it lawyers biased towards the pharmaceutical industry and get it chaired by someone with the guts to ensure the truth is found. This whitewashing enquiry will not fool the many of us who already know much of the truth and as more data is found from people at the DS and others, although concealed by big Pharma and our incompetent journalists employed by the mainstream media, we will know what a disaster governments around the world have caused

Last edited 3 months ago by SomersetHoops
0
0
mrbu
mrbu
3 months ago

Like so many other commodities, whitewash is very expensive these days.

0
0
Gezza England
Gezza England
3 months ago
Reply to  mrbu

They have a lot to cover.

0
0

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