by Arjun Walia, The Pulse:
The New York Times takes a stab at discussing COVID vaccine injuries.
My friend and colleague Dr. Madhava Setty recently wrote a piece critiquing and analyzing a recent New York Times article about thousands of people who believe they are vaccine injured.
The title goes: “Thousands Believe the Covid Vaccine Harmed Them. Is Anyone Listening?” and is written by Apoorva Mandavilli.
The article’s subtitle reads:
TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
“Apoorva Mandavilli spent more than a year talking to dozens of experts in vaccine science, policymakers and people who said they had experienced serious side effects after receiving a Covid-19 vaccine.”
Madhava offered some wise critiques in his piece. I’m going to summarize a few, and then add another thought of my own.
Firstly, some of Madhava’s critiques are:
We can see here that the New York Times piece was addressing the subject while also minimizing it. But why did the New York Times write this piece? What was the author thinking? Do they truly think the number of vaccine injured is just “thousands?” or is this what the NYT chose to write because they know they’d get crushed if they wrote “hundreds of thousands” or “millions?”
Being in media for such a long time you begin to understand how the business works on many levels.
Recall that over the last 3 years, questioning vaccine safety and vaccine injuries was like questioning the Holocaust… within mainstream thought circles. The degree of public shame and the amount of smear pieces written regarding this subject was astronomical. No one could miss it.
As a result, a delusion was built for many people. The extreme mainstream position was that these products were safe and effective, and injuries were nonsensical to consider. Think something different and you were bullied into a corner. To be fair, a similar delusion was built in extreme views on the alternative side. They claimed that everyone was going to die from these “death shots” within two or three years. But we’ll leave that for now.