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Description
Sujets
Informations
Publié par | Everest Media LLC |
Date de parution | 31 juillet 2022 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9798822552531 |
Langue | English |
Poids de l'ouvrage | 1 Mo |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
Insights on Judy Mikovits & Kent Heckenlively's Plague of Corruption
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8 Insights from Chapter 9 Insights from Chapter 10 Insights from Chapter 11 Insights from Chapter 12 Insights from Chapter 13 Insights from Chapter 14
Insights from Chapter 1
#1
I was riding my bike down Harbor Boulevard in Oxnard, California, in 2011 when I was followed by a man in a white pickup truck with Nevada plates. I told the story to a friend, and they said it was really strange.
#2
The dark arts of persuasion are used by corporations to influence and control politicians, who write laws in their favor.
#3
The best scientists have always been those who went against the grain of traditional thought. Think of Galileo claiming the Sun did not revolve around the Earth, or Darwin challenging the Biblical idea that all creation, plants and animals, land and sea, were created in six days.
#4
I did not know if I could write this book. It was difficult for me to recount the disturbing stories I would tell. I was afraid of suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, the condition often found in soldiers, police, or firefighters who have served on the front lines of conflict.
#5
I began to become suspicious of other events around me. I would see a man with a white pickup truck watching me, and then police would show up and say they were watching me. I had to get rid of my cell phone, and take the battery out.
#6
I had to figure out a way to escape from my house. I decided to take my stepdaughter, Elizabeth, out for a walk. When three men approached them, I asked them to serve me with a lawsuit, and they let us go.
#7
I had an idea of who was behind the threats, and it wasn’t Harvey Whittemore. I called my friend Jeanette, an attorney in San Francisco, and explained what had happened. She began looking for a local attorney who could handle my case.
#8
The fight was about motive and opportunity. If the journal Science allowed the data to stand, the pharmaceutical companies would have been negligent in their use of animal cell cultures to produce vaccines and other pharmaceutical products.
#9
I was afraid that the scientists who created the weakened viruses for vaccines had created new problems. I was worried that they didn’t want to rock the boat, and they didn’t want to be the ones to stand up and say that science had made a terrible mistake.
#10
I was arrested, and spent five days in jail because of the notebooks. The police searched my house from top to bottom, leaving papers everywhere, claiming I had taken notebooks that were obligation to retain as the principal investigator on two government grants.
#11
The plaintiff’s husband found the notebooks, which were planted in the closet by the representative of HW, AW, Kinne, Lombardi, and Hillerby.
#12
I was eventually forced to declare bankruptcy, despite having no debt, because I believed that if I went down the same ME/CFS path as the defendants in the Science paper, I would end up in jail in Nevada and possibly die under mysterious circumstances.
Insights from Chapter 2
#1
I have come to believe that government-sponsored science and industry have the potential for great good, but they can also go awry if those in charge lack integrity.
#2
At Upjohn, I was something of an oddball. I had little coordination, but I was tenacious.