News Round-Up
21 September 2023
“You’d Have to Pay Me to Buy an Electric Car”
20 September 2023
by Will Jones
A closer look at the timelines of Germany's Patients Zero and One reveals troubling inconsistencies, which call into question the entire official story of Germany’s alleged first COVID-19 cluster.
"We have set the building blocks for a Health Union, helping to vaccinate an entire continent – and large parts of the world," European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said this week.
In February 2020, a few days after being released from his quarantine "imprisonment", Germany's first Covid patient told an interviewer: "I’m doing great. I was never in fact doing poorly."
It turns out that the original 'asymptomatic spreader' whose case was widely reported in the medical literature actually had symptoms and took medicine. Yet the paper claiming otherwise has never been retracted.
The 'hidden contract' the EU made with Pfizer-BioNTech reveals that the Government-backed vaccine-maker was given preferential treatment in an arrangement that has been branded "predatory".
Most people seem to be under the illusion that the scandalous EU contract with Pfizer-BioNTech, absolving the companies of liability, is only available in redacted form. Is Twitter censorship to blame?
Just why did three young Belgian cyclists suddenly develop heart problems shortly after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine two years ago? And why weren't we paying attention?
Germany is a crucial partner – not funder – of the Gates Foundation and the co-funding it has provided both to projects and to programmes runs into the billions, not the millions.
In spring 2021, American basketball player Brandon Goodwin said blood clots from the Covid vaccine "ended my season". But Wikipedia has scrubbed this from his entry. How many more are being silenced?
22 year-old Lars Dendoncke, a Brighton defender, has announced his retirement from professional football after being diagnosed with myocarditis. He's the second Brighton player to retire with a heart condition this year.
Is Rhodes burning? Seen from the air, it doesn’t look like it, as a new aerial video shows an isolated fire, but not a widespread conflagration.
Critics of the WHO Pandemic Treaty argue it will consolidate power in the hands of the WHO's private sponsors. But closer inspection reveals that far and away the biggest sponsor of WHO pandemic initiatives is Germany.
© Skeptics Ltd.