Thursday, January 14, 2010

Swine flu was as elusive as WMD. Mad scientists, mad media, mad officials...

Let me recap. Six months ago I reviewed the latest bit of terrorism to emerge from the government's Cobra bunker, courtesy of Alan Johnson, home secretary. Swine flu was allegedly ravaging the nation. The BBC was intoning nightly statistics on what "could" happen as "the deadly virus" took hold. The chief medical officer, Sir Liam Donaldson, bandied about any figure that came into his head, settling on "65,000 could die", peaking at 350 corpses a day.

(...)

Swine flu is not the first time we have suffered this nonsense. I have a stack of predictions by senior scientists on BSE/CJD in 1995. It would "lead to 136,000 deaths" – a spurious exactitude used to convey plausibility – and "could infect up to 10 million Britons". This led to an obscene £5bn campaign of cattle destruction and compensation. When the prediction proved wildly wrong, the government excused itself with a classic Rumsfeld-ism: "The absence of evidence is not the evidence of absence."

(...)

This is why people are ever more sceptical of scientists. Why should they believe what "experts" say when they can be so wrong and with such impunity? Weapons of mass destruction, lethal viruses, nuclear radiation, global warming … why should we believe a word of it? And it is a short step from don't believe to don't care. Full story...

Don't miss:

  1. Drug companies made false swine flu claims...
  2. Drug firms cashed in on scare over swine flu...
  3. Dr. Russell Blaylock and the swine flu vaccine scam...
  4. Polish health minister lambasts swine flu vaccine...
  5. Vaccines are causing illness, disease and death...
  6. Dr. Russell Blaylock: forced vaccinations, government and the public interest. (Must-read)

No comments:

Post a Comment