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When it comes to
selling chemicals that claim to treat H1N1 swine flu, the pharmaceutical
industry's options are limited to two: Vaccines and anti-virals. The most
popular anti-viral, by far, is Tamiflu, a drug that's actually derived from a
Traditional Chinese Medicine herb called star anise.
But Tamiflu is no herb. It's a potentially fatal concentration of isolated
chemical components that have essentially been bio-pirated from Chinese
medicine. And when you isolate and concentrate specific chemicals in these
herbs, you lose the value (and safety) of full-spectrum herbal medicine.
That didn't stop Tamiflu's maker, Roche, from trying to find a
multi-billion-dollar market for its drug. In order to tap into that market,
however, Roche needed to drum up some evidence that Tamiflu was both safe and
effective.
Roche engages in science fraud
Roche claims there are ten studies providing Tamiflu is both safe and effective.
According to the company, Tamiflu has all sorts of benefits, including a 61%
reduction in hospital admissions by people who catch the flu and then get put on
Tamiflu.
The problem with these claims is that they aren't true. They were simply
invented by Roche.
A groundbreaking article recently published in the British Medical Journal
accuses Roche of misleading governments and physicians over the benefits of
Tamiflu. Out of the ten studies cited by Roche, it turns out, only two were ever
published in science journals. And where is the original data from those two
studies? Lost.
The data has disappeared. Files were discarded. The researcher of one study says
he never even saw the data. Roche took care of all that, he explains.
So the Cochrane Collaboration, tasked with reviewing the data behind Tamiflu,
decided to investigate. After repeated requests to Roche for the original study
data, they remained stonewalled. The only complete data set they received was
from an unpublished study of 1,447 adults which showed that Tamiflu was no
better than placebo. Data from the studies that claimed Tamiflu was effective
was apparently lost forever.
As The Atlantic reports, that's when former employees of Adis International
(essentially a Big Pharma P.R. company) shocked the medical world by announcing
they had been hired to ghost-write the studies for Roche.
It gets even better: These researchers were told what to write by Roche!
As one of these ghostwriters told the British Medical Journal:
"The Tamiflu accounts had a list of key messages that you had to get in. It was
run by the [Roche] marketing department and you were answerable to them. In the
introduction ...I had to say what a big problem influenza is. I'd also have to
come to the conclusion that Tamiflu was the answer."
In other words, the Roche marketing department ran the science and told
researchers what conclusions to draw from the clinical trials. Researchers hired
to conduct the science were controlled by the marketing puppeteers. No matter
what they found in the science, they had already been directed to reach to
conclusion that "Tamiflu was the answer."
Now, I don't know about you, but where I come from, we call this "science
fraud." And as numerous NaturalNews investigations have revealed, this appears
to be the status quo in the pharmaceutical industry.
Virtually none of the "science" conducted by drug companies can be trusted at
all because it really isn't science in the first place.
It's just propaganda
being dressed up to look like science.
Sadly, even the CDC has been fooled by this clinical trial con. As stated by
author Shannon Brownlee in The Atlantic:
"...the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention appears to be operating in
some alternative universe, where valid science no longer matters to public
policy. The agency's flu recommendations are in lockstep with Roche's claims
that the drug can be life-saving -- despite the FDA's findings and despite the
lack of studies to prove such a claim. What's more, neither the CDC nor the FDA
has demanded the types of scientific studies that could definitively determine
whether or not the company's claims are true: that Tamiflu reduces the risk of
serious complications and saves lives. Nancy Cox, who heads the CDC's flu
program, told us earlier this year she opposes a placebo-controlled study (in
which one half of patients would be given Tamiflu and the other half would be
given placebo), because the drug's benefits are already proven."
Did you catch that last line? The CDC isn't interested in testing Tamiflu
because "the drug's benefits are already proven." Except they aren't. But this
is how the pharmaceutical industry operates:
Step 1) Fabricate evidence that your drug works.
Step 2) Use that fraudulent evidence to get your drug approved.
Step 3) Use fear to create consumer demand for your drug (and encourage
governments to stockpile it).
Step 4) Avoid any actual scientific testing by claiming the drug has already
been proven to work (and cite your original fraudulent studies to back you up).
This is the recipe the CDC is following right now with Tamiflu.
It's a recipe of
scientific stupidity and circular logic, of course, but that seems to be
strangely common in the medical community these days.
Even the FDA says Tamiflu doesn't work
The FDA, remarkably, hasn't entirely given in to the Tamiflu hoax. They required
Roche to print the following disclaimer on Tamiflu lables -- a disclaimer that
openly admits the drug has never been proven to work:
"Tamiflu has not been proven to have a positive impact on the potential
consequences (such as hospitalizations, mortality, or economic impact) of
seasonal, avian, or pandemic influenza."
Even further, an FDA spokesperson told the British Medical Journal, "The
clinical trials... failed to demonstrate any significant difference in rates of
hospitalization, complications, or mortality in patients receiving either
Tamiflu or placebo."
It's the same message over and over again, like a broken record: Tamiflu doesn't
work. And the "science" that says Tamiflu does work was all apparently
fabricated from the start.
The Tamiflu stockpiling scandal
Junk science, though, is good enough for the U.S. government. Based on little
more than fabricated evidence and Big Pharma propaganda, the U.S. government has
spent $1.5 billion stockpiling Tamiflu. This turned out to be a great deal for
Roche, but a poor investment for U.S. citizens who ended up spending huge
dollars for a medicine that doesn't work.
As is stated in the Atlantic:
"Governments, public health agencies, and international bodies such as the World
Health Organization, have all based their decisions to recommend and stockpile
Tamiflu on studies that had seemed independent, but had in fact been funded by
the company and were authored almost entirely by Roche employees or paid
academic consultants."
Even if Tamiflu did work, there are Tamiflu-resistant strains of H1N1 are now
circulating (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ca...).
The upshot of all this is that governments around the world are flushing
billions of dollars down the drain stockpiling a drug that doesn't work -- a
drug promoted via propaganda and scientific fraud.
This isn't the first time your government has wasted taxpayer dollars, of course
(it seems to be what the U.S. government does best), but this example is
especially concerning given that this was all done with the excuse that natural
remedies are useless and only vaccines and Tamiflu can protect you from a viral
pandemic.
But as it turns out, vaccines and Tamiflu are useless and only natural remedies
really work. That's why so many informed people around the world have been
stocking up on vitamin D, garlic, anti-viral tinctures and superfoods to protect
themselves from a potential pandemic that most world governments remain clueless
to prevent.
I find it fascinating that the governments of the world are stockpiling
medicines that DON'T work, while the natural health people of the world are
stockpiling natural remedies that DO work. If a real pandemic ever strikes our
world, there's no question who the survivors will be (hint: it won't be the
clueless chaps standing in line waiting for their Tamiflu pills...).
Which remedies really do work to boost immune function and protect the body from
infectious disease? I've actually published a special report revealing my top
five recommended remedies:
http://www.naturalnews.com/Report_A...
In addition to the remedies mentioned in that report, I also recommend high-dose
vitamin D as well as the Viral Defense product from
www.PlantCures.com
I have no financial ties to any of the companies whose products are recommended
here, by the way. Unlike the pharmaceutical industry, I don't operate purely for
profit. My job is to get valuable information out to the People -- information
that can help save lives and reduce suffering. This is the job the FDA and CDC
should be doing but have long since abandoned in their betrayal of the American
people.
Sources for this story include:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/2009...
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full...
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full...
Tamiflu anti-viral drug revealed as complete hoax; Roche studies based on
scientific fraud
December, 2009
by Mike Adams
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