Norman Fenton Explaining The "Cheap Trick" Vaccine Efficacy Illusion
It's very powerful muti, this. Even if the vaccine actually has negative efficacy, i.e. even if the vaccine actually increases the chances of the vaccinated becoming infected by the disease, then the simple trick of delaying the initial cases by counting subjects as unvaccinated for the first two or three weeks, results in an apparently effective vaccine.
Pfizer representatives in front of the Australian Senate, showing that the "benefit/risk ratio" (how do you quantify the risk when you don't know anything about it?) is crucial:
Subscribe to Dr John Campbell.
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