(A.K.A. Non-Original Rants)

–Co-opting good stuff from all over the ‘Net and maybe some original thoughts—ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒE

________________________________________________________________________________________________

Crimes of omission

 I saw a flyer from a community in Wyoming trying to give people reasons why they should receive the jab.  I thought the first item was the most interesting and disingenuous.

Reason #1:  The vaccines are FDA approved.  

Well, technically true, I guess, given a stretch.  There are three injections that have been approved for emergency use by the FDA.  None of these have gone through the long-term testing and studies required for true approval.  

Just like they changed the definition of vaccine to include the Pfizer and Moderna gene therapy jabs, they weasel word to imply something that’s not true.

The only reason they are getting away with this widespread testing is because of the continuing states of emergency.  Once those are gone, then the rules regarding informed consent–true informed consent–kick in.



10 responses to “Crimes of omission”

  1. It won't paste, but there's a meme circulating saying:”10 years from now you'll start seeing TV ads that say 'If you received COVID-19 vaccinations in 2021 you may be entitled to compensation, call 1-800-SHYSTER for more information'The operative phrase is: “approved for emergency use by the FDA”

    Like

  2. BillyBob–I saw that one too. It'd be funny if it wasn't possible. They're kind of editing the part about emergency use. Leaving it out to create a falsehood out of truth.

    Like

  3. Not approved. The official term is Emergency Use AUTHORIZATION.

    Like

  4. Yep, ONLY approved as an EUA, which is EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATION, which you have to dig to find buried deep in the paperwork… sigh

    Like

  5. Bear and NFO–thanks for that clarification! What it means is that it's not just selective editing going on, it's outright changing the verbiage to make it more official and palatable. We've been trained to think that FDA approved means that something isn't going to kill or maim us. Emergency Use Authorization means something can be used but maybe shouldn't be.

    Like

  6. It won't paste, but there's a meme circulating saying:”10 years from now you'll start seeing TV ads that say 'If you received COVID-19 vaccinations in 2021 you may be entitled to compensation, call 1-800-SHYSTER for more information'The operative phrase is: “approved for emergency use by the FDA”

    Like

  7. BillyBob–I saw that one too. It'd be funny if it wasn't possible. They're kind of editing the part about emergency use. Leaving it out to create a falsehood out of truth.

    Like

  8. Not approved. The official term is Emergency Use AUTHORIZATION.

    Like

  9. Yep, ONLY approved as an EUA, which is EMERGENCY USE AUTHORIZATION, which you have to dig to find buried deep in the paperwork… sigh

    Like

  10. Bear and NFO–thanks for that clarification! What it means is that it's not just selective editing going on, it's outright changing the verbiage to make it more official and palatable. We've been trained to think that FDA approved means that something isn't going to kill or maim us. Emergency Use Authorization means something can be used but maybe shouldn't be.

    Like

Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *