Author: CCH Research Team
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Unveiling the Hidden Risks: Dr. Christensen on the Covid Vaccines and its Danger
Dr. Margaret Christensen connects COVID-19 vaccines to hormonal disruptions and various health issues, including infertility, miscarriages, and fetal deaths. She attributes these effects to the spike proteins and lipid nanoparticles in the vaccines, which can damage the mitochondria and disrupt the immune system. Christensen remarks that the effects can lead to autoimmune diseases, cancer, and…
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The Push for New COVID-19 Vaccines Amid Safety Concerns and Low Case Rates
The FDA’s vaccine advisory committee unanimously recommended a monovalent JN.1-lineage COVID-19 vaccine for the 2024-2025 formula despite low COVID-19 hospitalization and death rates. Concerns were raised about vaccine safety, with bioscience researcher David Wiseman highlighting potential cancer risks linked to the vaccines. Critics, like Dr. Mary Tally Bowden, called for removing COVID-19 vaccines from the…
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The Uncharted Risks of Repeated COVID-19 mRNA Vaccinations
This article denounces Professor Michael Plank’s recommendation for additional COVID-19 mRNA vaccines, highlighting concerns over safety and efficacy, particularly with new “FLiRT variants” and Vaccine Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (VAIDS). It examines a Harvard Medical School study linking mRNA vaccines to severe health risks, including fatal cerebral ischemia. It also critiques Jennifer Doudna’s support of…
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A Whistleblower’s Brave Stand for Transparency in Pfizer’s Vaccine Development
Melissa McAtee, a whistleblower from Pfizer, exposed internal issues, including the use of graphene oxide in COVID-19 vaccines and the presence of HEK 293T cell lines in development, which could potentially cause cancer. She revealed that a Spanish lab found graphene oxide in 28 out of 100 Pfizer vaccine vials and that Pfizer’s internal database…
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Ethical Breach in Gardasil Trials Raises Safety Concerns
This study issued in the International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine found that Merck’s Gardasil clinical trials in Denmark violated medical ethics by using a proprietary aluminum adjuvant (AAHS) in placebos, misleading participants about its contents. The researchers revealed that AAHS, a potent and understudied adjuvant (adjuvant is a substance added to most…
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The Rise in ADHD Diagnoses Among U.S. Children
A CDC study published in the Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology reveals that 11.4% of U.S. children aged 3-17 have been diagnosed with ADHD, marking a significant increase since 2016. The research utilizes data from the 2022 National Survey of Children’s Health, highlighting distinctions in ADHD prevalence across demographics and treatment rates. Experts…
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Ensuring Privacy: The Ongoing Case for Voluntary Digital ID Systems
The Children’s Health Defense (CHD) urged U.S. regulatory authorities to ensure digital ID systems remain voluntary following the Biden administration’s plan to create a national digital identity ecosystem. CHD stressed a Los Angeles Superior Court order that upheld the right to use traditional IDs, reinforcing that digital IDs should be optional. The court’s decision came…
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Urgency vs. Safety: The Rush for the Bird Flu Vaccines
This article talks about how the U.S. government is nearing an agreement to fund a late-stage trial of Moderna’s mRNA bird flu vaccine through BARDA, potentially starting next month with tens of millions of dollars. This could mean a commitment to purchase vaccine doses if trials are successful. Pfizer is also developing an mRNA vaccine…
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A Call for Balanced Scientific Debate on the Climate Change Narratives by Randall Carlson
This essay and review of research argue that the severity and frequency of extreme weather events are not increasing because of climate change, and the warming observed since the 19th century may be within the range of the earth’s natural capacity. Carlson critiques the reliance on positive feedback models to amplify the effects of CO2…
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More Legal Battles to Come Even as GSK Wins Zantac Case
A Chicago jury ruled in favor of drugmakers GSK Plc and Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, rejecting claims that the heartburn drug Zantac caused Angela Valadez’s cancer. The ruling marks the first win for the companies in thousands of similar lawsuits, with Valadez seeking at least $640 million in damages. Despite the jury’s decision, Valadez’s lawyer plans…