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Even candidates who had long been on the waiting list for a transplant were booted for not agreeing to take the jab. Children were no exception. — Dave Peters, attorney


Six days after Zuckerberg posted


a video vowing to embrace the First Amendment, the CEO of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s vaccine watchdog orga- nization, Children’s Health Defense (CHD), posted an open letter to Zuckerberg asking why he still refused to restore its Facebook and Instagram accounts. “Many of the pronounce-


ments by government experts like Dr. Anthony Fauci — that COVID vac- cines prevented transmis- sion, that there was no plausible evi- dence that SARS-CoV-2 may have leaked from a lab, and that COVID vaccines were not causing serious injuries, including myocarditis and death — proved to be false,” wrote CHD’s Mary Holland. “But instead of deplatforming the


FAUCI


CDC, FDA, and other government sites for posting inaccurate informa- tion, Meta targeted CHD.” In another sign that there is still


intent to squelch negative evidence about the vaccine, the Washington Medical Commission’s practice of disciplining doctors on professional misconduct charges for opposing or criticizing public health recommenda- tions survived a U.S. Supreme Court appeal by doctors who had been disci- plined for publicly warning about the dangers of the COVID-19 shot. On Jan. 13, SCOTUS elected not


to hear the case. The following week, on Jan. 22, two days after Donald Trump was sworn in as president, the Informed Consent Action Net- work (ICAN), another notable vaccine watchdog group, published an analy- sis of hundreds of FDA documents on the vaccine it had spent years litigat- ing to get released.


According to the group, the docu-


ments contain hard evidence that seri- ous adverse events from the COVID- 19 injection “far surpassed the FDA’s standard alert threshold,” but were never disclosed. In January, when Lissa


Olvera raised concerns about the potential conse- quences of the COVID-19 vaccine, she told News- max the transplant team at Minnesota University “disappeared,” leaving her husband Jerome to


languish. The dedicated dad and graphic


designer now is considered too sick to undergo a much-needed lung trans- plant that resulted from a rapid-mov- ing inoperable lung infection he devel- oped only months earlier. “His body is shutting down,” Olve-


ra said tearfully, with the couple’s 11-year-old son by her side. “It’s too late for him.” In the case involving Dartmouth- Hitchcock, after what appeared to be some behind-the-scenes maneuvering, New Hampshire Attorney General John Formella issued a press release heralding that “following engagement” with his office, the hospital had changed its policy to align with state law. However, Formella indicated that


the change was specific only to kidney transplants, and made no mention of heart, liver, or lung transplants. The conservative group RebuildNH, which had fought to ban COVID-19 vaccine mandates in the Live Free or Die state, was infuriated. “If this is accurate, DHMC is still flagrantly breaking the law. And @JohnFormella should be ashamed of himself for accepting the bare mini- mum to help DHMC avoid a lawsuit


Medical Centers Linked to Big Pharma


I


f there is one common thread in the controversy, it is that those hospitals


still enforcing COVID-19 vaccine mandates have ties to vaccine makers, says Dave Peters of the Pacific Justice Institute. Vanderbilt University Medical


Center, which performs the most heart transplants in the world and enforces a “relentless” vaccine transplant policy, according to Peters, helped develop both the Moderna and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines. Donor reports show that Vanderbilt has been a recipient of multiple grants from Pfizer and what the pharma giant calls “funded initiatives” over the years. Mikael Dolsten, one of Pfizer’s top


five shareholders, continues to serve on the National Institutes of Health’s Accelerating COVID-19 Therapeutic Interventions and Vaccines (ACTIV) executive committee. Its primary mission was to speed up the release and promotion of the vaccine. Another top-five Pfizer


shareholder, Frank D’Amelio, sits on the board of directors for health insurance giant Humana. In 2021, in what Humana titled a


“Provider Notification,” it heralded an amendment to the emergency use authorization of the COVID-19 vaccine to allow it to require another dose of the shot in immunocompromised individuals, specifically “organ transplant recipients.” Following the rollout of the


COVID-19 shot, all three vaccine makers posted record profits. According to Corporate Watch, Pfizer posted a net profit of $3 billion; Moderna, $8 billion; and AstraZeneca, $6.4 billion. — A.G.


while breaking the law,” the group posted on X. Buttermore, who said she was never


notified of the change by either the attorney general’s office or DHMC, felt like the state had hurriedly bro- kered a “shut up” deal. “I’m not anti-vax by any means, but


I feel like this quite literally is a shot in the dark,” she said.


MARCH 2025 | NEWSMAX 29


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