The West’s Covid strategy is crumbling. By Kerry Wakefield.
The West’s Covid-19 strategy of lockdowns, mass vaccinations and extreme curbs is losing credibility by the moment, even if various wannabe-despots are slow to realise it.
Despite vaccination levels running at 70 per cent and above in many Western nations, Covid cases are at record levels across the UK, Europe, Australia, the US, Israel and more, nearly two years after the virus first escaped China. The variants are outrunning the scientists’ vaccines, vaccine efficacy is waning, and multiple health authorities such as the WHO and the European Medicines Agency (EMA) have come out warning against repeated boosters, not only because they were designed for previous variants, but because they may have adverse health effects.
‘We should be careful in not overloading the immune system with repeated immunizations,’ warned Marco Cavaleri, the EMA head of vaccines strategy. Former UK vaccine agency boss Dr Clive Dix says vaccinations have now become a ‘waste of time’. And finally, early treatments are in focus — new drugs, antivirals and more.
And how severe is Omicron? It poses a 91 per cent lower death threat than the Delta variant, said Centres for Disease Control (CDC) director Rochelle Walensky, citing a big new study showing only one death among 52,000 Omicron cases. … Relatives who’ve had it recently say it’s just a bad cold. So, if you’re ill, old, or obese, take your shots, but normal life should return for everyone else. …
For most in the West, the pandemic seems clearly over, even if care must still be taken to protect the vulnerable and our hospital system. The best aspect of Australia’s response is that, geographically isolated, we kept the more dangerous original virus and variants at bay until milder Omicron arrived. No doubt this saved thousands of lives.
But with the benefit of hindsight, the global mass vaccination strategy is looking more like a foreseeable error; vaccines inevitably trail viral variants and as with the flu vaccine, being protected against last year’s variant may not be much help against this year’s strain.
Moreover, the bills for this Fauci-driven strategy, especially the rushed and experimental ‘vaccines’, are coming due. New reports show the jabbed seem more likely to catch Covid than the unjabbed, possibly due to an immune-suppression effect of the vaccines. In January, Public Health Scotland released age-adjusted figures showing a Covid case rate of 11 per 1000 in the unvaccinated, compared with 25 per 1000 in the double-jabbed. The jabbed were also twice as likely to be hospitalised.
And as a skyscraper is to a hut, so is the rising number of reports of the Covid vaccine-injured compared to previous reports of vaccine adverse events. This shows up in the (self-reported) US Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System and the WHO’s Vigibase system, especially heart inflammation, strokes, and blood clots. Japan now slaps myocarditis warnings on the mRNA vaccines, and we have all seen the all too frequent media reports on collapsing sportsmen.
Excess death rates (those above expected mortality levels) are rising alarmingly: Indiana life insurance company CEO, OneAmerica’s Scott Davison, recently said excess deaths were running 40 per cent above pre-pandemic levels, in people aged 18-64. The figures were unprecedented, industry-wide, and mostly not filed as Covid-19 deaths, he said. Time will tell if these deaths are due to social upheaval, mental health and drug issues, vaccine injuries or something else.
A bad batch issue is emerging, with reports that a mere four per cent of Pfizer batches were responsible for all VAERS death reports associated with that vaccine.
Remember, vaccines were not properly tested and were only approved in the West for emergency use — because no other alternative treatment was available (they said). Which is why big pharma, big government, and big media in the West have gone to such ridiculous lengths to pretend that there are no alternatives available — namely ivermectin, HCQ, vitamin D and zinc, and so on.
hat-tip Stephen Neil