Igor Chudov | 31 Aug 2022
Everything fits the definition
FDA defines “medication health fraud” (also known as quackery) as offering UNPROVEN and UNTESTED products to the public, like here:

Today, the FDA approved “Bivalent Ba.5 Booster” because of an unspecified “emergency”. What is the emergency? Joe Biden says there is not one!
The booster was tested on, drumroll, 8 mice. That’s it. It will be given to millions of people next week.
How is approving a completely untested product, not medical quackery?
EDIT: this product does not even work properly and is inconsistent by a factor of 23 times:
Ba.5 Booster’s “8-Mice Trial” Actually FAILED
So, the FDA just approved the new Ba.5 bivalent booster, based on a trial of exactly 8 mice. Steve Kirsch, in a reply to my previous post about the Ba.5 booster being medical quackery, asked a question, what happened to the 8 mice in the trial? Did they die…Read morean hour ago · 189 likes · 126 comments · Igor Chudov
The FDA also refused to convene even its own “expert committee” known as the VRBPAC. The committee, comprised of FDA stooges, approved the craziest things before — but some members of it, like Paul Offit, sounded their opposition to the Ba5 plan.
So, to make sure that the public is certain that these boosters are “safe and effective”, the FDA decided against convening VRBPAC — to prevent Offit from expressing his opinion.
Mind you, I do not like any members of the VRBPAC, including Offit, because they have not held their duty to keep us safe, above their careers. Offit is not a hero. He is simply smarter than the rest of the FDA careerists and he probably is looking into where he will fit in the post-Covid-vax world. He realizes that there is criminal liability lurking in the shadows.
Did you expect anything better from the FDA?


