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Oh, he’s back, is he?

I blew the whistle on Covid jabs five years ago. Now, I’m fighting for my medical licence
When my father died suddenly in 2021, I raised legitimate safety concerns about mRNA vaccines. The establishment backlash was immediate
Aseem Malhotra

Presumably the against sugar folk, the against salt folk, the against obesity folk, the against UPF folk, have all thrown him out so he’s this gig instead.

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JuliaM
1 month ago

Stopped clock, and all that, but otherwise, couldn’t happen to a more deserving chap.

Theophrastus
Theophrastus
1 month ago
Reply to  JuliaM

Why is he “deserving” of this treatment, Julia? ISTM that he was right about the covid mRNA vaccines. And, medically at least, ISTM he’s right that excess sugar, excess salt, excess blubber and excess highly processed foods are not good for human health – all things in moderation. Where I probably differ from him is on what (if anything) should be done about obesity and the excess consumption of salt, sugar and highly processed foods.If his answer is more public health wallahs, more bansturbation, sugar taxes, etc, I would part company with him there.

Recusant
Recusant
1 month ago
Reply to  JuliaM

Not too sure with Malhotra….a willingness to challenge orthodoxy is valuable, fundamentally it’s how medicine moves forward. Whether he is right or wrong is somewhat immaterial – at least in the context of an individual issue – that medics whose experience says “hang on, that’s not what we see” get to say do matters….

David
David
1 month ago

A bit harsh he thought that his Dad’s death was suspicious and wants to investigate it. I’m pretty sure as a cardiologist he could probably make more money on the day job

The Original Jim
The Original Jim
1 month ago

Risking having your livelihood taken away for having the temerity to question the State/Pharmaceutical Industry complex doesn’t seem like the actions of a chancer on the make now does it? All the other bandwagons he may or may not have jumped on didn’t involve him losing his career, so one has to conclude that perhaps this time he actually means it. And as such perhaps one should play the ball not the man?

Interested
Interested
1 month ago

I think Tim has a bit of a blind spot here.

Interested
Interested
1 month ago

No, this isn’t a new thing. He has been on this track for a long time. And it’s an odd kind grift – which I think is your insinuation – that sees you lose your well-paid job and the approbation of… er… the Guardian etc.

He might be wrong about a lot of stuff but it seems to me that he was right about the jabs.

It further seems to me that we should encourage doctors to go against the orthodoxy, especially when all they want to do is advise people to wait and see, and the orthodoxy is to force people under pain of unemployment to take a novel and effectively entirely untested new ‘vaccine’ technology, right after the WHO changes the official definition of ‘vaccine’ to fit this new thing, and about which the government and the ‘health authorities’ are lying (‘it will stop transmission’, ‘there are no side effects’, ‘it stays in the arm’ etc etc etc), and which was developed to deal with a virus about whose origins and seriousness they are also lying, all paid for using billions of £/$/€, this money being handed over in often mysterious circumstances (see eg Ursula von der Lyin’ negotiating with Pfizer on behalf of the EU on WhatsApp, and then deleting the messages).

But hey maybe it’s all cool.

gareth
gareth
1 month ago
Reply to  Interested

@Interested

Yes, wot you wrote ++

dearieme
dearieme
1 month ago

“ancient wisdom tells us that evil grows in ignorance.”

Actually, it grew pretty well in the best educated, most cultured nation in the world during a chunk of the 20th century. It also grew pretty well in the most backward large country in Europe for many decades.

Why do people deliver these vapid, wrong-headed generalisations? Virtue-signalling, I suppose.

Steve
Steve
1 month ago
Reply to  dearieme

Evil grows in the dark
Where the sun, it never shines
Evil grows in cracks and holes
And lives in people’s minds

dearieme
dearieme
1 month ago

Tim, I’ve just tried to upvote Gareth and Interested. Your software blocked me on the grounds that I was voting on my own comment.

john77
john77
1 month ago
Reply to  dearieme

I’ve tried several upvotes and got the same response

Theophrastus
Theophrastus
1 month ago
Reply to  john77

Same! Every comment I try to like gets the ‘you can’t like your own comment’ response. Even DM’s and john77’s above.

While the code monkey is at it, please can we know why some memes from X and FB will not upload?

Chris Miller
Chris Miller
1 month ago
Reply to  Theophrastus

#metoo It isn’t exactly the same message as if you try to upvote your own comment, which reads: “You are not allowed to vote for this comment”. This one reads: “You cannot vote for your comment”.

Last edited 1 month ago by Chris Miller
rhoda klapp
rhoda klapp
1 month ago

If there’s anything you can’t say under threat of punishment, it’s probably true or at least should be subject to open debate.

Dave Ward
Dave Ward
1 month ago

I can’t understand why someone with his background would willingly have 2 jabs in the first place. He must have known that the so-called “Vaccines” had not completed the normal 5 stage approval process, and because of this they could only be administered under “Emergency Use Authorisation”. As if that wasn’t bad enough, his age group had a miniscule chance of dying even if they actually caught Covid…

Theophrastus
Theophrastus
1 month ago
Reply to  Dave Ward

AIUI, the covid vaccines went through all five approval stages with the process being accelerated by parallel testing and “rolling reviews”. Whether that was satisfactory is highly debatable; but Malhotra’s initial assumption that it was doesn’t seem irrational.

The covid vaccines were initially deployed under “temporary authorisation to supply”: it wasn’t “Emergency Use Authorisation” which is a US legal term.

Paul, Somerset
Paul, Somerset
1 month ago
Reply to  Theophrastus

And that accelerated approval was down to one man: D Trump. Operation Warp Speed still appears to be the achievement of which he’s most proud. As the man himself told his audience:

Before Operation Warp Speed, the typical timeframe for development and approval, as you know, could be infinity. And we were very, very happy that we were able to get things done at a level that nobody has ever seen before. The gold standard vaccine has been done in less than nine months.

https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-operation-warp-speed-vaccine-summit/

I’ve tried to explain to my wealthy Labour-voting chum in Brighton that the injections for which he kept queuing up, and which I declined, were the Trump Vaccines. But he just can’t have that. He’s still convinced that I’m simply lucky to have got away with it, and that if I’d ever tested myself for Covid I would definitely have had it, as he and his ‘vaccinated’ family did.

Last edited 1 month ago by Paul, Somerset
The Original Jim
The Original Jim
1 month ago
Reply to  Paul, Somerset

And the fact you survived the covid plague quite happily without any vaccines (assuming he’s right that you had it) doesn’t give him pause for thought?

Addolff
Addolff
1 month ago

I have yet to hear of one person who was sorry they did not get the jab.
I have heard a few people who did regret getting it.
The majority of people I know who complain about their health since getting the jab, seem unable or unwilling* to ask IF the two are linked.

*(you never ask a question you may not like the answer to of obvs….).

gareth
gareth
1 month ago
Reply to  Addolff

I, for one, am very glad that I did not get the “safe & effective”. As is my partner, who independently came to the same view.

And I recall, about this time last year, a bunch of elderly neighbors discussing the effects of their latest “booster” and how these were even worse than the effects of the previous ones…

Methought “I keep hitting myself on the head and it keeps hurting” and how (it is said, wisely IMO) “it’s a lot easier to fool folks than it is to get them to realize they’ve been fooled”.

PS: also seeing comment behavior as described by @Chris Miller

philip
philip
1 month ago

Malhotra didn’t question the results of vaccine trials, until his father died.
Doesn’t seem very wise or scientific to me.

A pal of mine, very fit, suddenly dropped dead on the golf course. I’d attribute it to them mRNA jabs except it was about twenty years ago.

gareth
gareth
1 month ago
Reply to  philip

Quite so. This was however not the case with all the “unexpectedly” afflicted young footballers, etc.

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