mistakes were made and uhh... but you know, nobody forced you to take it so nyah nyah *flies off to vacation chalet in helicopter*
That's how I think it will play out. The pharmaceuticals secured indemnity from prosecution before a needle touched any arm. If it becomes abundantly clear something is seriously wrong and the public demands retribution, then all that will happen is they will offer up a few individuals for a show trial like Nuremberg. Probably a few of the scientists responsible for developing the formula. Meanwhile, Fauci, Hancock, the executives, and everyone else involved will probably find their way to Switzerland or Argentina (I hear the Vatican is good at organizing that sort of thing).
The history books will just put it down as an 'industrial accident during a time of exceptional emergency'.
sadly i think watching your infant die from vaccine complications is the only way it's really going to reach some people that it was a risk not worth taking.
Unfortunately this is true. People are capable of denying just about anything until trauma smacks them back into reality.
soap? fuck soap! what has soap done for us lately? people have died, bro. it's unprecedented. only the jab can save us from dubious doom.
Little tangent for you. Puerperal fever. Doctors killed women because they didn't wash their hands after fisting corpses in the mortuary, then went and delivered babies with their grotty hands which caused fatal infections in the women. Fucking idiots.
It's amusing that they still give that historical example a funny scientific sounding name to excuse the fact it was just idiotic negligence on behalf of arrogant doctors (and the medical establishment). Kind of reminds me of SADS (Sudden adult death syndrome).. just give it an official name to obfuscate the truth.
From Wikipedia:
"Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis was a Hungarian physician and scientist, who was an early pioneer of antiseptic procedures. Described as the "saviour of mothers",
[4] he discovered that the
incidence of
puerperal fever (also known as "childbed fever") could be drastically reduced by requiring hand disinfection in
obstetrical clinics."
"Despite various publications of results where hand-washing reduced
mortality to below 1%,
Semmelweis's observations conflicted with the established scientific and medical opinions of the time and his ideas were rejected by the medical community. He could offer no theoretical explanation for his findings of reduced mortality due to hand-washing, and
some doctors were offended at the suggestion that they should wash their hands and mocked him for it."