Sujet : Re: USA : Jay Bhattacharya présenti pour diriger le ministère de la Santé publique
De : Ray_Net (at) *nospam* picarre.be.invalid (Ray_Net)
Groupes : fr.bio.medecineDate : 26. Nov 2024, 00:40:02
Autres entêtes
Organisation : iuneequa
Message-ID : <MPG.41af2942c6a6057398a61a@news.individual.net>
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In article <
koW0P.133176$8co7.110929@fx06.ams4>,
paul.aubrin@invalid.org says...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2024/11/23/bhattacharya-nih-director-trump-candidate/
Jay Bhattacharya est désormais le principal candidat au poste de
directeur des NIH choisi par Trump Le médecin et économiste formé à
Stanford, qui a obtenu le soutien du GOP après s'être opposé aux
confinements, aurait impressionné RFK Jr, le candidat choisi par Donald
Trump pour diriger le ministère de la santé.
Pendant la pandémie, Bhattacharya a notamment attiré l'attention sur un
document appelé "Déclaration de Great Barrington".
https://gbdeclaration.org/la-declaration-de-great-barrington/
- N'espérez pas que je signe cette pétition - surtout qu'en plus:
After gaining some publicity, this strategy was strongly denounced by many in the scientific
community. While it supposedly received 8,000 signatures from public health experts and
doctors, news outlets later revealed that some of those signatures were FAKE.
- Autre chose qui prouve votre besoin constant de nous désinformer:
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court will this March hear arguments centered on the government’s role
in communicating — and sometimes censoring — pertinent public health information in the midst
of a pandemic.
At the core of the lawsuit is whether the federal government’s requests for social media and
search giants like Google, Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to moderate Covid-19 misinformation
violated users’ First Amendment rights.
While the suit was originally filed by then-Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt — and known
as Missouri v. Biden — a range of plaintiffs arguing that the Biden administration suppressed
their Covid-19 content later joined. Those include Jay Bhattacharya and Martin Kulldorff, who
co-authored a paper, the Great Barrington Declaration, advancing the theory that people could
achieve herd immunity without vaccines.
Jim Hoft, owner of conservative outlet The Gateway Pundit, also joined the suit. Google in 2021
said it demonetized the website and many of its articles. “We have strict publisher policies
that prohibit content promoting anti-vaccine theories, Covid-19 misinformation, and false
claims about the 2020 U.S. Presidential elections,” a spokesperson said at the time.