Anonymous ID: 084ad8 Oct. 1, 2020, 9:53 p.m. No.10879851   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9925 >>9969 >>0211 >>0316

Former Chief Science Officer for Pfizer Says "Second Wave" Faked on False-Positive COVID Tests, "Pandemic is Over"

October 1, 2020

 

In a stunning development, a former Chief Science Officer for the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer says "there is no science to suggest a second wave should happen." The "Big Pharma" insider asserts that false positive results from inherently unreliable COVID tests are being used to manufacture a "second wave" based on "new cases."

 

Dr. Mike Yeadon, a former Vice President and Chief Science Officer for Pfizer for 16 years, says that half or even "almost all" of tests for COVID are false positives. Dr. Yeadon also argues that the threshold for herd immunity may be much lower than previously thought, and may have been reached in many countries already.

 

In an interview last week Dr. Yeadon was asked:

 

"we are basing a government policy, an economic policy, a civil liberties policy, in terms of limiting people to six people in a meeting…all based on, what may well be, completely fake data on this coronavirus?"

 

Dr. Yeadon answered with a simple "yes."

 

Even more significantly, even if all positives were to be correct, Dr. Yeadon said that given the "shape" of all important indicators in a worldwide pandemic, such as hospitalizations, ICU utilization, and deaths, "the pandemic is fundamentally over."

 

Yeadon said in the interview:

 

"Were it not for the test data that you get from the TV all the time, you would rightly conclude that the pandemic was over, as nothing much has happened. Of course people go to the hospital, moving into the autumn flu season…but there is no science to suggest a second wave should happen."

 

In a paper published this month, which was co-authored by Yeadon and two of his colleagues, "How Likely is a Second Wave?", the scientists write:

 

"It has widely been observed that in all heavily infected countries in Europe and several of the US states likewise, that the shape of the daily deaths vs. time curves is similar to ours in the UK. Many of these curves are not just similar, but almost super imposable."

 

In the data for UK, Sweden, the US, and the world, it can be seen that in all cases, deaths were on the rise in March through mid or late April, then began tapering off in a smooth slope which flattened around the end of June and continues to today. The case rates however, based on testing, rise and swing upwards and downwards wildly.

 

Media messaging in the US is already ramping up expectations of a "second wave."

 

https://hubpages.com/politics/Pfizer-Chief-Science-Officer-Second-Wave-Based-on-Fake-Data-of-False-Positives-for-New-Cases-Pandemic-is-Over

Anonymous ID: 084ad8 Oct. 1, 2020, 10:17 p.m. No.10880145   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0316

>>10879969

 

one reason why the EU will eliminate paper currency go digital and move to consol bonds.

 

debt obligations are unsustainable due to over spending of their welfare State and braindead negative rates (no bid on their existing bonds, no one in their right mind would purchase them), a problem (((they))) caused and the last people on earth to look to as the solution and yet here we are!

 

also, day shift baker wouldn't post as notable but should have, because this has huge implications!

 

ECB applies for 'digital euro' trademark amid feasibility study

October 1, 2020

 

The European Central Bank has applied to trademark the term “digital euro” as officials prepare to release an assessment of the benefits and drawbacks of creating a digital version of the currency.

The application was filed on Sept. 22 by the ECB’s legal representatives Bock Legal, according to the website of the European Union Intellectual Property Office. An ECB spokesman confirmed the filing.

Central banks across the world have been experimenting with digital versions of their currencies, with the idea of safely adapting to digitizing economies. ECB policy makers have recently stressed the need to stay on top of global changes in payments – both due to evolving technology and an increase in protectionism.

A team of experts from across euro-area central banks is due to publish an assessment soon. ECB President Christine Lagarde has repeatedly talked about the topic, and said in an address to the European Parliament last week that a public consultation will be launched within days.

“The Eurosystem has so far not made a decision on whether to introduce a digital euro. But, like many other central banks around the world, we are exploring the benefits, risks and operational challenges of doing so,” she said in a speech last month. “We have a duty to play an active role in balancing the risks and benefits of innovation in payments, so that money continues to serve Europeans well.”

 

https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/ecb-applies-for-digital-euro-trademark-amid-feasibility-study-1.1502076