News Round-Up
30 October 2024
The Saga of the Benin Bronzes Takes a Farcical New Turn
30 October 2024
by Mike Wells
The local government of Port Hedland in Australia has voted to call for the immediate suspension of Covid vaccines pending an investigation into evidence of excessive levels of synthetic DNA in the shots.
The Covid vaccines should be suspended due to accumulating evidence of high levels of DNA contamination which present a "substantial risk" of cancers, say 52 scientists and academics.
There is still a lack of honesty about the scale of Covid vaccine deaths, says Prof David Livermore. A few blood clot deaths from AstraZeneca are admitted. But that's just the tip of the iceberg and no one wants to know.
In the UK, as in the US, the Covid pandemic response switched abruptly in mid-March 2020 from a standard public health plan to a totalitarian lockdown-until-vaccine plan. Debbie Lerman digs into why this happened.
Hundreds of doctors and scientists from around the world have signed an accord calling for the suspension and investigation of mRNA Covid vaccines due to serious concerns about their safety and efficacy.
Germany has expanded its mRNA vaccine production capacity to up to one billion doses per year thanks to billions of euros in Government investment as it prepares to supply the world come the next pandemic.
Covid vaccines were touted as great achievements by Boris Johnson, Rishi Sunak and the Conservative party. But come the election and silence. Is it an admission that it has all gone sour, asks Prof David Livermore.
Elon Musk's endorsement of mRNA technology leaves many of his fans perplexed. What they don't appear to realise is Musk is part of the mRNA project and has a direct commercial stake in it.
After a recent study found that mRNA promotes cancer, Robert Kogon asks if Covid vaccine maker BioNTech already knew that in 2019 thanks to the hidden results of one of its failed cancer treatment trials.
A new peer-reviewed study has linked mRNA jabs to excess cancer deaths in Japan, with pancreatic, prostate and ovarian cancers showing excess deaths in both 2021 and 2022.
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