It's interesting to note the epithet "conspiracy theory" now applies to any opinion that goes against mainstream dogma. On another forum, I asked why the the (IMO lacklustre) results of the Recovery trial in steroids for Covid were trumpeted in the legacy media, whereas coverage of the impressive results in Covid ARDS in under 65s in a therapy trialled by a biotech (I've invested in) was relatively muted.
Straight away, I was informed by a poster who writes on medical topics that, while there wasn't much about it from the "talking heads", he'd quickly found "a couple of articles" on the biotech's therapy and I should therefore have done some basic research before "espousing conspiracy theories".
Anyone who says they've been injured by a Covid vaccine is a "conspiracy theorist". One member of a group who met with the FDA to raise awareness of vax injuries was even called a conspiracy theorist by her own doctor. Bizarrely (because they were the earliest adopters), the epithet "conspiracy theorist" even extends to participants on the original clinical trials,
As I mentioned in this post
65746912 , I met a doctor here in Melbourne who was administering the Pfizer shot. I asked him if he knew a child had been paralysed on the trial for ages 12-15 in a cohort of only just over 1000. He said he wasn't going "to go down that rabbit hole".
The mother of the injured child (Maddie de Garay) and three other participants of the original clinical trials speak out publicly about severe, life-changing injuries they say were either covered up or not investigated:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Dearly-Discarded-Unheard-Stories-Pandemic/dp/B09TXFDNKKBrianne Dressen started up a physician-led group for vax injured people:
https://react19.org/ and there are several other organisations such as realnotrare.com.
In your opinion, are all these people engaging in some kind of conspiracy to persuade the general public the Covid vaccines are not as safe as we've been led to believe? Or do you think it's just a lot of coincidences?
Here's a press conference where Queensland Minister of Health and Ambulance Services Yvette D’Ath is apparently clueless about a 40% jump in code ones. A couple of reporters shout out, asking if it's the vaccines, but D'Ath dismisses them saying, "vaccines help people stay out of hospital, not put them in hospital".
https://rumble.com/v10uifl-queensland-health-minister-cant-explain-sudden-40-heart-attacks-chest-pains.htmlWhat's your take on this? Are you a conspiracy theorist or a coincidence theorist?