Big Pharma criminal behavior: Pfizer used Nigerian children as “human guinea pigs”

pfizer-used-nigerian-children-as-human-guinea-pigs(NaturalHealth365)  Just a few years ago, news of a polio outbreak in Africa made headlines and raised eyebrows.  While celebrating the good news that there have been zero reported cases of wild polio among African children since 2016, officials, including the World Health Organization, had to asterisk this milestone by acknowledging an alarming reality: that cases of polio caused by the oral polio vaccine itself are sadly on the rise!

It’s just one unfortunate example of the unexpected and often ignored potential dangers of mass vax campaigns – and says nothing of the potential dangers inherent within the drug companies profiting from these drugs.  A short look at Pfizer’s history of mistake-making should be enough to illuminate this issue.

Here’s a brief rundown of Pfizer’s corruption and wrongdoing – a laundry list of fraud, negligence, and other criminal acts

One must acknowledge the potential for bias, conflict of interest, and other confounding factors that influence the “science” we hear about COVID shots and other pharmaceutical moneymakers.  Everyone, after all, must come to their own conclusions about when and whether to consume a drug, but true informed consent requires transparency of the research and development involved.

Perhaps this lack of transparency is why many have been so skeptical about the frantic push to get needles into the arms of every single person on Earth over the age of five – and perhaps even younger than that, soon enough, if Pfizer and Moderna have their way.  (Pfizer also announced this week that they would submit an application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to authorize the first COVID booster dose for kids aged 5-11.  In case you’ve lost count, that’s three shots – in addition to all the others within the childhood vax schedule – in less than a year, all under the guise of “emergency use authorization.”)

Indeed, when one considers Pfizer’s long history of criminality, the issue of transparency becomes even more relevant.

Here’s a glimpse of just a few of Pfizer’s most notable crimes, as described in a December 2021 article posted to Substack:

  • 1991: Pfizer was fined $3.1 million (peanuts to the drug company) by the federal government for violating the Clean Water Act by dumping untreated industrial waste into an Easton, PA wastewater treatment plant for more than six years
  • 1996: “Pfizer administered an experimental drug during a clinical trial on 200 children in Nigeria but never told the parents that their children were the subjects of an experiment.  Eleven of the children died and many others suffered side effects such as brain damage and organ failure.  A report by Nigeria’s health ministry concluded the experiment was “an illegal trial of an unregistered drug,” a “clear case of exploitation of the ignorant,” and a violation of Nigerian and international law.  Pfizer did not obtain consent or inform the patients that they were the subjects of an experiment, not the recipients of an approved drug.” (emphasis ours)
  • 2009: the year of the infamous $2.3 billion fine – Pfizer paid this hefty sum in one of history’s largest healthcare fraud settlements after pleading guilty to illegally promoting the drugs Geodon, Zyvox, Bextra, and Lyrica by way of physician kickbacks and fraudulent claims.

NOT fake news: Pharmaceutical industry spends BILLIONS on advertisements

The crimes and lawsuits listed above are just a tiny smattering of the ones involving Pfizer over the decade.  Yet, today we are supposed to blindly accept drugs made by this pharmaceutical powerhouse, knowing that the company is profiting handsomely off their product (to put it mildly).

How nice for them, after all, that not one, not two, not three, but at least FOUR doses of their moneymaking COVID shot (administered in less than one year) are needed to actually work!

Pfizer certainly is putting their profits to use to position themselves as leaders in healthcare and keep them top-of-mind in political and medical spheres.  According to Statista, the pharmaceutical industry spent nearly $4.6 billion on national television advertising in the United States in 2020 alone.

And according to a 2020 observational study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, between 1999 and 2018, the pharmaceutical and health product industry spent $4.7 billion (about $233 million per year) on lobbying the U.S. federal government and hundreds of millions more on contributions to presidential and congressional electoral candidates, national party committees, state candidates, and committees.

Nobody can deny how influential these drug companies are and how intertwined their board members are with the board members of major media corporations.  The question is: who will hold these companies accountable when more criminal acts inevitably come to light?

Sources for this article include:

NPR.org
Childrenshealthdefense.org
Substack.com
Substack.com
USNews.com
Statista.com
Healthnewsreview.org

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