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by Toby Young
News Round-Up
26 November 2024
Prof Neil Ferguson is denying responsibility for lockdown, telling the Covid Inquiry that scientists only set out evidence for ministers. Yet his infamous March 2020 report stated that lockdown was the only option.
'Public health' has always been the handmaiden of tyranny, casting a veil of 'hygiene' over abhorrent practices like eugenics and genocide, says Dr David Bell. The public must take back control from the 'experts'.
"I don't want to get into that": the Covid Inquiry's Hugo Keith KC shocks observers by shutting down Prime Minister Rishi Sunak when he points out that lockdowns did more harm than good.
In a stunning display of ignorance, the German Health Minister responded to parliamentary questioning on DNA contamination in the Covid vaccines by stating: "The vaccines are made with RNA not DNA."
In a new peer-reviewed study, Japanese researcher Dr. Yasusi Suzumura finds a massive safety signal for deaths associated with mRNA vaccines in the 10 days following inoculation.
New polling has found that around a fifth of the British public would back the return of Covid measures right now with almost half saying masks should be mandatory on public transport.
The WHO insists it is not about about to seize state sovereignty, despite its proposed pandemic treaty changes making completely clear states are required to do what they're told. Why is it not being truthful?
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has admitted he wanted non-essential shops to open before schools in the first lockdown and it's emerged he pushed for schools to be closed before shops in the second lockdown.
The leaked New Zealand vaccine data have been controversial including among sceptics, with Steve Kirsch's analysis coming in for sharp criticism. Nick Bowler says Steve gets a lot right and is right to be concerned.
Boris Johnson told the Covid Inquiry he hesitated to trust the apocalyptic predictions of Neil Ferguson's models because of his poor record from previous viruses. He was right to do so, say Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson.
© Skeptics Ltd.