BBC Comes to Terms With Collapsing EV Market
17 May 2024
by Sallust
Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson run a critical eye over week four of the Hallett Inquiry. Prepare for unprepared governments, questionable excuses, and a fear of future deadlier pandemics…
The next pandemic could be even more deadly than Covid, a Government scientific adviser has warned as he said the U.K. needs to be better prepared for a future health crisis.
The central problem was that Government pandemic plans didn't prepare us to lock down hard enough and fast enough, ex-Health Secretary Matt Hancock has told the Covid Inquiry.
The notion that all these top scientists were inept is implausible, says Debbie Lerman. Rather, they were playing the part they were given by the security apparatus that took charge and treated Covid as bioterrorism.
The UK's pandemic plan was clear that lockdowns were not to be used and ethics was to be central. Both of these were ditched in March 2020, says Dr David Seedhouse. Yet the Covid Inquiry has shown no interest in why.
The WHO's proposed Pandemic Treaty and new regulations will hand it unprecedented powers to declare pandemics, lockdowns and vaccination mandates, with the force of international law, leading experts have told MPs.
Government "groupthink" meant it only planned for an influenza pandemic that would "inevitably spread like wildfire" and failed to see that early quarantine would have stopped Covid in its tracks, Jeremy Hunt said today.
The World Health Organisation and the European Union yesterday announced their collaboration on global digital vaccine passports at a joint press conference in Geneva.
Government ministers are reported to be alarmed by plans to give the WHO sweeping new powers to impose lockdowns and other countermeasures on the U.K.
As a survey shows 93% of Icelanders still believe all the restrictions of the last three years were justified, Thorsteinn Siglaugsson wonders what it will take for us to avoid repeating the same mistakes over again.
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