the cdc pr campaign to induce fear
THE CDC PR CAMPAIGN TO INDUCE FEAR
OCTOBER 24, 2004. Below is an article from the National Post. Read it carefully. It sketches the CDC campaign to put Americans in a state of fear regarding the flu, so more people will get their flu shots.
You might say it's a PR campaign undertaken on behalf of vaccine manufacturers.
We are talking about the prescribed use of key words and phrases and images designed to evoke the desired response.
Put this together with my recent exposure of TRUE miniscule flu-death figures and you have something resembling a RICO crime in progress.
This is Ministry of Fear stuff right out of 1984.
Instead of investigating illness, the CDC is promoting a Pavlovian program of fear, panic, and even terror.
National Post October 22/2004
Vaccine fevers by Lawrence Solomon
Americans are being told that a manufacturing problem in a U.K. pharmaceutical plant has led to the U.S. shortage of flu vaccines. Americans aren't being told (and we aren't either) that the real manufacturer at fault is a U.S. government agency, the Centers for Disease Control, along with the World Health Organization and other vaccinate-anything-that-moves ideologues that have fabricated a phony crisis over the flu vaccine.
"Epidemics of influenza typically occur during the winter months and are responsible for an average of approximately 20,000 deaths," the CDC stated in 2002. That number mutated to "36,000 flu-related deaths" in November, 2003, and by December a gathering of public health officials warned that the toll could reach 70,000 this year. [whereas the true death figures are tiny---JR]
In concert with the ramp-up in death statistics, the government-steered
vaccination industry has run an elaborate bureaucracy designed to hype vaccine use, as seen in a slide show presentation last April by Glen Nowak, the CDC's spokesman for the National Immunization Program, to the American Medical Association. Here is the "Recipe that fosters influenza vaccine interest and demand," in the truncated language that appears on his slides: "Medical experts and public health authorities [should] publicly (e.g. via media) state concern and alarm (and predict dire outcomes) – and urge influenza vaccination." This "recipe," the slide show indicated, would result in "A. Significant media interest and attention [and] B. Framing of the flu season in terms that motivate behaviour (e.g. as 'very severe,' 'more severe than last or past years,' 'deadly')." Other aspects of the CDC's "Seven-Step Recipe for Generating Interest in, and Demand for, Flu (or any other) Vaccination" includes "Continued reports (e.g., from health officials and media) that influenza is causing severe illness and/or affecting lots of people – helping foster the perception that many people are susceptible to a bad case of influenza." and "Visible/tangible examples of the seriousness of the illness (e.g., pictures of children, families of those affected coming forward) and people getting vaccinated (the first to motivate, the latter to reinforce)."
This motivational slide show was designed to push the bounds of the vaccinated...
end of Post excerpt
JON RAPPOPORT www.nomorefakenews.com
www.nomorefakenews.com