Posted on 01/16/2023 3:25:17 PM PST by nickcarraway
He sure is. This “author” sounds like a paid shill for big pharma or covidiots in ALL of his writings.
No, because it's public record.
The FDA had to redact personal information out of the clical trial data and wanted to do it slowly. They were going to release a cetrain amount each month.
A judge, rightfully, said they had to speed that up.
Big Pharma didn't try to delay the release of anything.
“Where did it go?”
“Right in the lumberyard...”
Full blown
SSDD
Dude doesn’t know what a letter to a medical or scientific journal is.
FOIA...how’s that working out for those who question the government?
Look, the feds have been lying about whatever suits them for a long time. Trust your instincts, that’s as reliable as statistics from the government. Which is a rather sad commentary when you think about it.
If “the government” was a human being, said human would be classified a pathological liar.
Sort of the same thing the MSM did with "climate change". It was based on one letter with no data. Wonder if Forbes will write about that?
It doesn’t matter. Few people under the age of 30 ever needed a vaccine for Covid. This proves it was always about money.
I thought Forbes was a business news outfit. Guess they expanded to medical.
Pfizer wasn't trying to delay the release, the FDA bureaucracy just wanted more resources to do the redaction.
Here’s my perspective:
alcohol (voluntary), opioids (voluntary), car crashes (sort of voluntary-at least not coerced), suicide (voluntary), and experimental drugs [vaccinations?] (forced)
Proof of how corrupt the FDA is.
Of course. Conspiratorial, too.
Maybe, but they are in no way comparable to the ones in the Lausanne study McCullough & Polykretis cite.
In what ways are the lists not comparable? For starters we know that both lists were generated by reviewing news reports.
Do you understand that medical journals are different from any random news source scoured off of the internet?
The authors of the Lausanne study state, in their paper, that "most" sudden cardiac deaths of young athletes aren't reported to these journals - which were the only ones the authors considered.
Goodsciencing.com, on the other hand, cast a very wide net.
"This means that provided a person is reasonably fit, healthy and does some athletic activity, rather than an unfit “couch potato,” then they can be included in this list. Needless to say, these are only the persons reported to us by readers or that we discovered during research. Also note that almost all of these have been reported in the media."
You didn't answer my earlier question but do you think it's honest to compare a very select number of cases written up in select medical journals to a random collection of deaths pulled from all over the internet?
This might seem a bit nit-picky, but you're probably referring to the FOIA case brought by "Public Health and Medical Professionals for Transparency" against the FDA which you can find on PACER with this case number 4:21-cv-1058-P, or on Scribed if you don't have a PACER account. This seems to be the most common source for the "someone or other" wanted to hide the data for "75 years" claims, and the counter-claims that precise thing never happened.
Anyway, the correct numbers are: Pages of documents covered by the FOIA:
440,000
Number of pages FDA wanted to release per month:
500
Number of pages the court ordered the FDA to release per month:
55,00
"all they did was write a letter"
are letters to an editor peer-reviewed?
Does the Int’l Olympic committee track all athelete deaths or just those of olympic atheletes?
I did find this from 2017:
“The overall prevalence of CV disorders in this population was 12% (i.e. 33/267)
https://academic.oup.com/eurheartj/article/38/27/2092/3959647
That’s pretty clear.
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