Indiana's attorney general is fed up with COVID counters cooking the books. He wrote in an email today,
As published in an Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) journal in February of last year, confusion has surrounded “whether people die ‘of’ COVID-19 or ‘with’ COVID-19.” The journal noted a case in which a man significantly ill from terminal cancer entered a hospital while also infected with COVID-19 and later died. His death was recorded as a COVID-19 death statistic.
A local Orlando TV affiliate found a man who died from a motorcycle crash was tested and found to also have COVID-19. His death was recorded as a COVID-19 statistic until TV coverage caused it to be reversed.
The same AAMC medical journal article quotes the chief medical officer for Indiana University Health’s South Central Region in Bloomington as saying, “It’s usually a cascade of events that lead to death — it’s not one thing,” when a person dies who has also tested positive for COVID-19....Los Angeles County hospitals reported “roughly two-thirds of patients” who tested positive at hospitals were admitted for something other than COVID. Even the president’s chief medical adviser, Dr. Anthony Fauci, finally admitted to MSNBC that “if you look at the children that are hospitalized, many of them are hospitalized with COVID, as opposed to because of COVID." It took them nearly two years too long to admit much of the data didn’t reflect the reality of the pandemic, but the distinctions being made are crucial to how we approach it....
A hallmark of a republic is the ability to ask questions and seek answers from our government. Asking questions and raising concerns over -reported COVID-19 “statistics” is not about politics but about transparency. We should celebrate the drive to seek the truth. (Emphasis added.)
He's not alone: people are fed up with the bullshit. Even while writing this post, I got an email saying that Chris Masterjohn's interview with Jessica Rose--whose study was withdrawn without permission or explanation by a medial journal--was taken down by YouTube. Where can you get news and information when Google is manipulating results, YouTube is banning people who report inconvenient vaccine results, Twitter is slapping "misinformation" labels on the same, LinkedIn (which has ties to Pfizer, AstraZenica, J&J, Moderna and others) is kicking off doctors like Robert Malone and Suneel Dhand, and every program from news to sports to radio to the royal wedding is brought to you by Pfizer? Here's where you can find uncensored news:
COVID treatments: The Twitter feed of Gov. Ron DeSantis. Florida has led the way in early treatment. It was from their governor that I found out about monoclonal antibodies. Pro tip: type "Ron DeSantis" (without quotes) into Twitter's search bar to see all of his tweets. Twitter manipulates your feed, and you may not see every tweet by the people you follow. Pierre Kory is a clinician who writes about treating with repurposed drugs.
Kids and COVID: Vinay Prasad, Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of San Francisco, writes and talks a lot about kids and COVID. He has a YouTube channel and a substack.
COVID lawsuits: Get on the mailing list of Indiana's AG, Todd Rokita. You'll get news of any COVID lawsuit Indiana is involved in (it's at least four). (Your state's AG might have a similar news source more relevant to you.) As an aside, you'll also get tips on consumer protection and other matters, the latest being Indiana "taking the fight to the robocallers." This struck me as funny when I read it--I pictured Indiana's deep blue flag fluttering against a cloudy sky above an army attacking robots as Rokita egged them on: "We'll fight them in the forests, we'll fight them on the plains!" Kidding aside, they're fighting phone scammers, and good for them. For the abridged version of the news, Rokita also has a Twitter account, or you can find the latest federal mandate info here.
International Statistics: These are useful to Americans since the US is cooking books, failing to accurately report information, and failing to even collect some kinds of information. The best sources are the substacks (blogs) of Alex Berenson and Eugyppius. That's not all they blog about--Berenson's spicy takes on COVID hysteria and the insights of Eugyppius make both worth reading.
Investigative Reporting: Project Veritas has caught vaccine manufacturers, doctors and others on hidden camera in some embarrassing admissions and interviewed whistleblowers who've come forward.
Latest studies and data explained: Dr. Suneel Dhand, who's treated COVID patients since (I think) the pandemic started, discusses studies and emphasizes having a scientific attitude and taking care of yourself. He's on YouTube and Locals.com. Dr. John Campbell has a similar channel on YouTube, with more emphasis on the studies and data. Dr. Michael Eades is still writing--mostly about COVID now. His takes are about interpreting data (which he's been doing for decades). You can sign up for his newsletter here. If I had access to only one blog, it would be his old Protein Power blog.
Vaccine risks and injuries: Senator Ron Johnson has held press conferences with people who've suffered vaccine injuries--look for the videos on Odysee.com or Rumble.com. The Dark Horse Podcast (clips here) by biologists Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying have covered the risks of novel vaccines for almost a year, mostly from an academic perspective. Jessica Rose, Robert Malone and Geert Vanden Bossche are doctors and/or researchers who write about this.
People & info that YouTube, FaceBook and Twitter have Banned: Find them on Rumble, Gettr, Locals, Parler, Bitchute and Substack.
The wittiest news: the Babylon Bee. OK, it's not really news, but it's funny and the spirit of it is on target.
Miscellaneous tips:
- Use Qwant.com (my favorite) or DuckDuckGo.com to search--Google is making useful information hard to find.
- Sign up for newsletters from the authors mentioned. I haven't gotten any spam from them. Look for a confirmation email that may be required, and mark their emails as important to prevent them from being sent to spam.
- Sign up at one of the new, uncensored platforms when possible.
photo from Pexels.
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