A Space for Independent Viewpoints Uncategorized Roll Up Your Sleeve – The Swine Flu Fraud of 1976

Roll Up Your Sleeve – The Swine Flu Fraud of 1976

Spot the similarities to 2021-22!

The CBS 60 Minutes report the mainstream news media wants you to forget. This version, edited by Darrin McBreen, includes classic public service announcements (PSAs) funded by our government to persuade the American people to accept the Swine Flu jab in 1976 – the parallels to the current push with the Covid jab, and the unravelling fraud surrounding it, are eerily similar.

“The more things change the more they stay the same.”

Similar parallels can be found in various campaigns sponsored by Pharma, CDC, etc, such as for promoting the annual flu vaccines. In 2010 the CDC produced a guide on how to create public panic and hence vaccine uptake for the annual flu jab. For the report, click here, entitled US-Panic-Paper-Surfaced.

An extract:

“In order to encourage people to get vaccinated against the flu, Nowak suggests that medical experts and health authorities publicly (e.g. via the media) express great concern, make massive references to the terrible consequences of the flu and urgently recommend flu vaccinations. The flu season should, Nowak suggests, be “framed” with terms that motivate behavior, e.g. as very difficult, more severe than last year or last year, even fatal.

Ongoing reports (e.g. from health authorities and the media) that the flu is causing serious illnesses and/or affecting many people, Nowak says, help to promote the perception that the flu can take a severe course in very many people. The reports are to be accompanied by visible and tangible examples of the severity of the disease (e.g. pictures of children, families of those affected who come forward) and people who are vaccinated (the former to motivate, the latter to reinforce). The reports on flu incidents should always be accompanied by an indication of the importance of vaccinations.”

The author of the report, Glen Novak, notes that these harder hitting methods are necessary as, “Facts, figures and statistics are not in themselves synonymous with good communication…”

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