Swine Flu Review - The Case For Reforming U.S. Emergency Health Laws

Epidemics and Emergencies can be declared when they do not exist. Untested, fast-track, experimental vaccines can be mandated without exemptions in a false emergency. True totals for pandemic-disease-deaths and emergency-vaccine-deaths are unknowable. Therefore, a reliable risk-benefit analysis is impossible to calculate. Mortality from the swine flu “pandemic” was disproportionally high for some vaccinating countries (e.g., U.S. and Britain), and disproportionally low for a non-vaccinating country (Poland)—substantially so. Therefore, pandemic vaccines may be counterproductive. Corruption and conflicts of interest occurs at the highest levels of government and the pharmaceutical industry. Therefore, governments should not assume absolute authority over or during healthcare emergencies. Individual citizens MUST have the right to make their own informed decisions about vaccines and other medical protocols in declared emergencies. But this will not occur unless enough citizens unite and take appropriate action.

Alan Phillips, J.D., Director, Pandemic Response Project