5.01.2009

Swine flu alert clears old stock of Tamiflu

Uh huh. Very interesting except for the conclusion, which steers the reader to blaming the pig farm in Mexico. Right. This was cooked up in a lab per orders of the CDC and WHO. Maybe the doctors don't want to tell you *that*, hmm? - Ed.

It is almost three years since we faced the hysteria of an avian flu epidemic, when governments bought billions of dollars of Tamiflu – the same anti-viral now being promoted to combat a supposed swine flu pandemic. The shelf life of Tamiflu also happens to be three years.

The World Health Organization has, at the time of writing, increased its threat level to five, which means governments can activate their pandemic plans – and start handing out Tamiflu drugs.

This is extremely convenient for governments that would have very soon have to dispose of billions of dollars of Tamiflu stock, which they bought to counter avian flu, or H5N1. The US government ordered 20 million doses, costing $2bn, in October, 2005, and around that time the UK government ordered 14.6 million doses. Tamiflu’s manufacturer, Roche, has confirmed that the shelf life of its anti-viral is three years.

Read more @ What doctors don't tell you

No comments: