Aaron Siri (Part 2): The Vaccine Paradigm Led to Coercion and Conflicted Health Agencies | TEASER #EpochCinema #EpochTV #TheEpochTimes #MaryPatriotNews [Video]

🔴 PREMIERE at 7:30pm ET on EpochTV: https://ept.ms/Y0211AaronSiriP2 🔵 THE FINAL WAR is a documentary that uncovers the Chinese Communist Party’s 100-year plot to defeat America.👉👉 https://ept.ms/3UMSDfC🔵 Sign up for the American Thought Leaders newsletter to stay up-to-date on new episodes, releases, and events 👉 https://ept.ms/ATLnewsletter “I was always told that vaccines are safe. And if a product is safe, why do you need to give the manufacturer…essentially immunity to liability for the injuries that that product causes? Because if it’s safe, certainly in the way that our public health authorities project it safe to the public, there shouldn’t be any injuries, or there should be one in a million, as you often hear.” In part one of my interview with Aaron Siri, managing partner of Siri and Glimstad, he explained how in 1986, vaccine manufacturers were struggling to make a profit due to liability costs exceeding their revenue. To keep them in business, the federal government granted them immunity from lawsuits that claimed injury or death as a result of their product.“COVID vaccines didn’t enter into a vacuum. They were rolled into a very long established paradigm and way things are done,” says Siri. “They had a narrative around natural immunity that they determined fit in with their policy. And then the studies followed to make it fit.”In part two, we discuss natural immunity from COVID-19 and the safety review periods in clinical trials of other vaccines, such as Hepatitis B. “147 kids. Five days of safety monitoring after injection. There’s no indication there was a control group,” says Siri. “COVID-19 vaccines – they were called ‘rushed.’ They said the clinical trials were rushed. They said development was rushed. But the reality is the clinical trials for the COVID-19 vaccines that the average American received, compared to the clinical trials for almost every childhood vaccine, were the most robust studies that have been done on vaccines.”We also look at the conflicts of interest between America’s health agencies and pharmaceutical companies.“Think about this business model. You have a vaccine. You can’t be sued for harms. You have a guaranteed market because kids are required to get it for school. And your health agencies promote it for you and defend against any harm,” says Siri.- – -Credits:shutterstock Images: https://shutr.bz/2u8Zdp8Music: Audioblocks.com, epidemicsound.comStock Video: Videoblocks.com————————————————-© All Rights Reserved.

February 13, 2023
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The complicated truth about J. Edgar Hoover #FreeMinds #JohnStossel #liberty #ReasonFoundation #ReasonTV #MaryPatriotNews [Video]

The first FBI director wasn’t a cross-dresser, says a new biography, but he was often quick to flout constitutional limits on state power.https://reason.com/video/2023/01/04/the-complicated-truth-about-j-edgar-hoover/_____No federal bureaucrat played a bigger role in 20th-century law enforcement than J. Edgar Hoover (1895-1972), who served as the head of the FBI and its predecessor agency for half a century.Hoover oversaw crackdowns on everything from real and imagined communists in the first Red Scare of the 1920s and its sequel in the 1950s; staged high-profile shootouts with “public enemies” like John Dillinger and Babyface Nelson in the 1930s; surveilled Nazi and Axis sympathizers during World War II; infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan in the 1960s; and pursued extra-legal operations against civil rights leaders and antiwar protesters in the 1960s.His personal vendetta against Martin Luther King, Jr. led to one of the most shameful incidents in FBI history, when the bureau sent an anonymous letter to King shortly before he was to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, encouraging him to commit suicide or be exposed as a serial philanderer.Hoover is the subject of Yale historian Beverly Gage’s new biography, G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century. Gage seeks to complicate and flesh out the life and legacy of Hoover, who is rightly notorious for often brushing aside constitutional limits on state power like so much police tape at a crime site. Yet she points out that he opposed the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, undermined Sen. Joe McCarthy’s overwrought anti-communist witch hunts, and refused to do political surveillance for Richard Nixon, inadvertently leading to the bungled Watergate break-ins and the 37th president’s fall from grace.To understand Hoover in all his complexity—including his much-whispered-about personal relationship with his FBI colleague Clyde Tolson—is to understand the moral ambiguities of the country he served, Gage tells Reason, as well as the promise and limits of constitutional government in an open society.Produced by Nick Gillespie; Edited by Adam Czarnecki and Justin Zuckerman; Sound editing by Ian KeyserPhoto Credits: World History Archive/Newscom; FBI.gov; akg-images/Newscom; Everett Collection/Newscom; Everett Collection/Newscom; Keystone Press Agency/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Stone Dennis / Mirrorpix/Newscom; JT Vintage/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Agence Quebec Presse/Newscom

January 5, 2023
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