Is this funeral an opportunity for world players to meet…and was planned?
RFK Jr. Teases Next Target After Artificial Dye Ban
Friday, Apr 25, 2025 - 06:30 PM
If you blinked during Tuesday’s Health and Human Services Department press conference on the agency’s plans to ban artificial dyes, you may have missed Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. teasing his next target.
Kennedy announced plans to target pharmaceutical additives, signaling he is getting ready to fire his opening salvo against Big Pharma.
A reporter asked, “I'm wondering if there's any pharmaceutical additives that you'd like to eliminate?” prompting laughter from the audience.
“We're gonna start on that next,” the HHS secretary replied, offering no further details on his plans.
Kennedy on Tuesday unveiled a plan to eliminate eight artificial food dyes and colorings from the U.S. food supply by the end of next year, committing to collaborate with food companies to ensure a smooth transition and remove these additives from products.
Kennedy, pioneer of the Make America Healthy Again movement, has long criticized Big Pharma, vowing to hold the industry accountable for what he calls rampant corruption and profiteering. Kennedy has accused pharmaceutical giants of manipulating federal agencies like the FDA and seeks to curb direct-to-consumer advertising that he says taints media. Kennedy also plans to scrutinize vaccine safety. He was one of the most outspoke critics of the COVID vaccine and government-instituted lockdowns.
"I just want to urge all of you, it's not the time to stop; it's the time to redouble your efforts, because we have them on the run now, and we are going to win this battle," Kennedy said. "And four years from now, we're going to have most of these products off the market, or you will know about them when you go to the grocery store."
more:
https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/rfk-jr-teases-next-target-after-artificial-dye-ban
A new study finds that flu vaccines have negative efficacy, meaning the risk of getting flu is higher after vaccination
By Rhoda Wilson on April 26, 2025
In 2022, a Cleveland Clinic study found that the risk of covid infection increased with the number of covid vaccine doses received, a phenomenon known as negative efficacy.
Another study published earlier this month by the same researchers found that influenza-vaccinated people had a 26.9% increased risk of testing positive for influenza compared to unvaccinated people.
Experts, including Dr. Meryl Nass, suggest that the results are not surprising due to the lack of efficacy testing for flu vaccines before they are used on the public.
Another Cleveland Clinic Study Exposes More False Narratives on Vaccine Efficacy
By Miss Information as published by New Zealand Doctors Speaking Out With Science (“NZDSOS”)
Based in Ohio, USA, Cleveland Clinic is considered a leader in clinical research, education and care. With tens of thousands of employees, they are uniquely placed to investigate outcomes of staff vaccination policy including covid and influenza vaccine mandates.
In 2022, Cleveland Clinic researchers led by Dr. Nabin Shrestha and Dr. Steven Gordon at the Department of Infectious Diseases followed over 51,000 employees. They found that the proportional risk for covid infection increased with the number of covid vaccine doses an individual received.
more:
https://expose-news.com/2025/04/26/flu-vaccines-have-negative-efficacy/
So Judge Hannah Dugan served as an executive director for Catholic Charities USA…Wasn't Catholic Charities in the news recently…see below:
Hannah C. Dugan (born 1959)[1] is an American lawyer and judge from Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. She has been a Wisconsin Circuit Court Judge for Milwaukee County since 2016. Prior to her judicial service, Dugan served as an executive director for Catholic Charities USA in south-east Wisconsin, president of the Milwaukee Bar Association, and worked with several legal aid organizations.
Catholic charity efforts in Middle East harmed by USAID cuts: report
By Micha
https://www.christianpost.com/news/catholic-church-charity-efforts-hampered-by-usaid-cuts-report.html