EMAILS FROM CDC SHOW FRAUD, BIAS, COMPLACENCY, CONFLICT ON MYOCARDITIS RISK

March 22 | Posted by mrossol | Big Govt, CDC NIH, Censorship, Health, Transparency[non], Vaccine

It’s over. Just walk away and move on from CDC.

Source: EMAILS FROM CDC SHOW FRAUD, BIAS, COMPLACENCY, CONFLICT ON MYOCARDITIS RISK

I would say I’m left speechless, but you know me, and CDC, too well.

In the light of data and transparency, the recent revelations concerning the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) represent more than a mere oversight; they embody a systematic failure to uphold the sanctity of informed consent and the integrity of science itself. Through the meticulous investigation of two dedicated scientists, bolstered by the power of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) records, we now understand the extent to which the CDC delayed the dissemination of critical information regarding myocarditis risks post-mRNA COVID-19 vaccination—information that was particularly salient for young males. This delay is not a simple lapse but a significant breach in the covenant between public health institutions and the public they serve.

As they peeled back the layers of this debacle, they uncovered a troubling reality in which the CDC, an entity entrusted to act as the nation’s guardian of public health, instead engaged in a dangerous game of information gatekeeping. This was not science being practiced in the light of day, but rather, decision-making shrouded in opacity, seemingly driven more by the desire to preserve the narrative of an unblemished vaccination campaign than by the principles of public health and ethical responsibility.

This episode starkly illuminates the risks of allowing the preservation of public confidence to overshadow the imperative of risk communication. The real tragedy here is not just the risk posed to millions of Americans—though that alone is grave—it’s the erosion of trust in public health institutions. When science and public health policy become entangled in the web of political and bureaucratic priorities, the loser is always the public’s trust. This situation calls not for passive reflection but for a vigorous and forthright demand for accountability, transparency, and a wholesale reform of the entire regulatory system committed to the principles of science, devoid of bias and unburdened by the weight of institutional pride.

In the spirit of advancing science and public health, it’s imperative that we, as a society, learn from these failures. We are implementing systems and processes that prioritize the rapid dissemination of information critical to public health, guided by the unwavering compass of transparency and the unassailable principles of scientific integrity. Only then can we hope to restore the fractured trust between the public and those institutions tasked with safeguarding our health.

 

 

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