Guernsey Press

Health matters concern every individual – it’s time for a public debate

THE holocaust period of WWII is a distant memory, and there only remains a very small number of local people who have lived through those years. Nevertheless, WWII history books abound, and the horrors of the inhumane medical experiments carried out during the Nazi period will never be forgotten. The words, never again, are imprinted on our subconscious, right?

Published

Well, that question needs to be asked. The Covid pandemic of early 2020 overshadowed our lives, literally. In the ensuing panic, people did not have time to ask questions; they just submitted themselves to whatever ‘medicine’ was promised to get over the Covid virus. The ‘vaccines’ offered in December 2020 – and still offered today in the form of boosters – are based on the mRNA gene therapy, a procedure never previously successfully used on human beings, and therefore only temporarily approved by the US FDA (Food and Drug Administration) under the EUA (Emergency Use Authorisation).

Pfizer’s and Moderna’s submission papers for temporary approval refer to the mRNA gene therapy as a medical experiment, due to incomplete clinical trials and unavailable data regarding short, medium, and long-term side effects.

Fast-forward to 2023, very little has changed. Clinical trials of the ‘vaccines’ have still not been completed, and the data on medium and long-term side effects of these ‘vaccines’ are still being collected, in real-time, and reported to the health authorities on a daily/weekly/monthly basis. Medical experiments are still continuing today, and people volunteering for the ‘vaccines’ and ‘boosters’ are still doing so without any information about mid- and long-term side effects. In that respect, today’s medical experiments are no different from the medical experiments of the holocaust years.

So how do Guernsey people feel about this situation? Do they agree with our government’s continued promotion of these medical experiments? These questions have never been asked. Yet, health matters concern every individual islander and it is time for a full, open, public debate, with no restrictions or conditions.

This is particularly important because nothing is resolved. Numerous mainstream press references have been made to the near certainty of another pandemic, possibly an avian flu. The gravest concern is that the World Health Organization (Who) has confirmed that – as a matter of policy – future pandemics will also be dealt with through mRNA-based ‘vaccines’ or variants, leading to new forms of medical experiments, all without clinical trials, and all without data regarding short, medium and long-term side effects.

Guernsey is an independent, self-governing jurisdiction, and the people need to take stock.

PHIL DUPRE