Fascinating (and disturbing) to note how the epithet "conspiracy...

  1. 887 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 2907
    Fascinating (and disturbing) to note how the epithet "conspiracy theorist" has evolved over the course of the "pandemic" to refer to anyone who holds an opinion or dares to ask a question that may contradict the official story.

    On another forum, I asked why the Recovery trial in steroids were trumpeted by mainstream media outlets but coverage of Mesoblast's very good results in under 65s was relatively muted. Straight away, I got an answer by someone who told me that while they hadn't found much from the talking heads, they had come across "a couple of articles on it" and I should do some basic research before "espousing conspiracy theories".

    About a year ago, I was having a conversation with another patient in a dentist's waiting room about lockdown and the suffering it caused. I said I'd really like to know what that military group was doing in the Melbourne's CBD in September 2021, particularly which organisation they were connected to. Another woman muttered, "conspiracy theory" under her breath. I asked if she'd like to see the footage of them or the photos from Phillip Altman's slides but she declined.

    Anyone who reports iatrogenesis (injury from a medical treatment) is branded a "conspiracy theorist". There's a video available on YT about Red Skin Syndrome caused by topical steroids. Many dermatologists still claim the condition doesn't exist. There's a very good documentary called "Skin on Fire" available on YT. One sufferer, a patently decent and intelligent person says at the 15 min mark:

    “There’s something in mainstream communications that’s not consistent with my experience. I’m not a conspiracy nut. I’m not that person”.

    Despite thousands of peer-reviewed papers documenting various injuries from the Covid vaccines, those who report injuries are STILL dismissed as "conspiracy theorists" (even if they were participants on the original clinical trials, or more bizarrely, branded"anti-vaxers").

    The young woman I saw in the CBD late 2021, was so badly maimed by the Covid shots (Pfizer) she couldn't stand without literally being held up on either side by friends. She and the girl aged 17 who got myocarditis (also Pfizer) said their injuries were acknowledged by their doctors but they didn't know how to treat them, so they were being seen by naturopaths.

    I mentioned the case of the paralysed woman to my family who implied she was making it up. I asked them if they thought she also did something to her skin to make it blotchy. What about her voice? Did she alter it to make it sound strange? ( I suspected a neurological injury, one that Pfizer, in their postmarketing experience document, admits has been reported). My daughters told me if I mentioned "conspiracy theories" again, they'd walk out of the house.

    Not only did participants on the original clinical trials report injuries (and there's footage of one investigator admitting to other potential cases). but there are several support groups for vaccine injuries:

    https://www.realnotrare.com/ https://www.nomoresilenceau.com/campaigns/covid-vaccine-class-action-injuries/https://global.jabinjuriesglobal.com/https://react19.org/

    These are likely the tip of the iceberg because it's reasonable to think that, because of the fear of vicious and nasty abuse, many injured people keep quiet and there are those (such as turbo cancers) who don't even suspect the mRNA vaccines could be causal.

    I can't prove the Covid shots definitely caused these injuries but I can prove that many, many people are saying they've been badly injured by them. They can't all be mistaken because many show evidence.

    Are they part of a global conspiracy to make out the Covid vaccines are not as safe as we've been led to believe?


 
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.