The Evidence for Pandemic Urgency of the Globalists, is a Sham, By Brian Simpson

An academic article has appeared in the journal Global Policy, which is somewhat surprising. The title is "Urgent Pandemic Messaging of WHO, World Bank, and G20 is Inconsistent with their Evidence Base." The abstract is below, and the article can be accessed from normal internet without a special log in, which is now quite uncommon. The contents are not new to us, but are for the academic context, where the authors show that the evidence that organisations like the World Health Organization use to hype up some pandemic existential threat, is inadequate, providing no justification for the proposed measures.

While we have presented numerous articles putting the same case, now the academics are saying it too. All the more reason to reject the World Health Organization pandemic treaty.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1758-5899.13390

Abstract

When international agencies make claims of an "existential threat" to humanity and advocate for urgent action from countries, it should be a safe assumption that they are consistent with their own data. However, a review of the data and evidentiary citations underlying the claims of the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank, and the Group of Twenty (G20) reveals a troubling picture in which the stated urgency and burden of infectious disease outbreaks, namely those of pandemic threat, is grossly misrepresented. These discrepancies in key documents and subsequent recitations in pandemic preparedness proposals have significant policy and financial implications. Disproportionate pandemic preparedness based on these false premises risks a significant opportunity cost through unnecessary diversion of financial and political resources away from global health priorities of higher burden. As WHO Member States plan to transform the way international health emergencies are managed at the World Health Assembly in May 2024, there is a crucial need to pause, rethink, and ensure future policy reflects evidence of need." 

 

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Sunday, 24 November 2024

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