By reading
this article by A Midwestern Doctor, I stumbled on this 2 hour film by John Davidson,
Epidemic of Fraud. It’s from one month ago and is still up (it gets an 8.8 on IMDb):
Davidson used to be a journalist and video editor for CNN and then worked as a producer and director for many of the other major networks. During COVID, he realized he had to speak out about what was happening and began covering what had happened to the vaccine injured. In turn, he decided to produce a professional quality documentary about the corruption taking place during the plandemic. It’s a good documentary imo, and here is a rough outline:
It focuses mostly on hydroxychloroquine and its suppression, and breaks down exactly what happened with HCQ and the degree to which so many public officials lied through their teeth to keep it off the market—to the point they were even able to override the Trump administration trying to get it to the American people. For example, clinical trials were conducted which deliberately gave the participants toxic doses of hydroxychloroquine and then used their deaths to argue a decades old drug was suddenly “unsafe” and blared that message (along with other fabricated data which supported that narrative) throughout the mass media.
Because of his media background, Davidson was able to create montages of everyone in the media echoing the sculpted language created to sell the COVID narrative. This is a very common practice which proved very effective at influencing individuals who do not have an extensive background in the subject. One of the most important aspects of Davidson’s documentary is that he makes this tactic clear to the viewers so it gives them the ability to begin seeing through it so they can no longer by influenced by it (or so we hope).
From 5:24 onwards, he goes into HCQ and its history, which I found pretty interesting:
HCQ was one of the first malaria drugs. Chloroquine is based on the drug quinine, which is credited as the first compound to treat infectious disease. It was initially gotten from the bark of the cinchona tree and given to settlers from Spain by Indians near Peru in the 1600s and brought to the Western world as a cure for malaria. Then Jesuit priests traveled the world with cinchona bark, so much that it became known as Jesuit bark.
In 1751 the Spanish Crown took control of all sources of quinine. Restricting access as a new form of science based imperialism.
At the beginning of the American Revolution, George Washington requested his political masters to buy as much cinchona bark and quinine powder as possible.
In 1778 the Spanish Crown restricted British access to quinine. In 1820 quinine was officially isolated, reducing the need for cinchona tree bark. That opened the door for European exploration into all of Africa, considered at the time “the white man’s graveyard” due to the many Europeans who succumbed to malaria in Africa.
In the 1860s during the American Civil War, Southern states relied heavily on shipping for goods, services and medication, so Abraham Lincoln and his team enacted the Northern blockade to block cotton shipments to Europe, weapons imports, and quinine, so that they could cause as many sick and dying soldiers as possible. The Southern doctors went to work to find a local tree from which quinine could be derived, and they found the bark of the Dogwood tree. But
the doctors wouldn’t use it as they felt the drug didn’t have enough clinical trials under its belt and they
didn’t want to be considered as homeopaths. (Where have we heard that before?)
In the 1860s malaria was the major issue for the English soldiers in India, so soldiers began combining the bitter tasting quinine with water and an alcoholic beverage to get their daily dose of life saving quinine - the birth of the Gin & Tonic.
By the 1930s, the primary locations for growing cinchona moved from South-America to India and Indonesia, lands that would soon be cut off to the Allies. In WWII, the US was desperate for a source of quinine and cinchona and returned to South-America on a series of cinchonan missions to build a supply chain and protect the Allied troops. At the same time, Nazi scientists weaponized mosquitos with malaria and then conducted experiments with these mosquitos on prisoners in the Dachau concentration camp. Many of these prisoners were Jesuit priests. As WWII drew to a close, when US and UK troops advanced on Rome, German troops cut window screens of all the homes in the region, confiscated quinine from the residents and allegedly released their weaponised malaria loaded mosquitos. The advancing Allied troops were ready and protected with quinine, cinchona and chloroquine, but the local Italians weren’t so lucky. That year there was a massive spike in deaths from malaria.
HCQ remained important for decades after as well as derivatives of the drug. One of those is
Mefloquine, which has been implicated in
causing post-traumatic stress disorder and neurological issues in troops that were stationed in Iraq. The issues with Mefloquine (sold under the name of
Lariam, and to my knowledge still recommended in Holland to people who go to areas where there is a malaria risk) were so dire that the FDA gave the drug a black box warning, the most strongest warning possible.
For centuries the restricted access to HCQ, quinine and drugs like them, has been a standard tactic of warfare; it was involved in the
Revolutionary War, the Civil War, WWI, WWII, countless smaller wars all over the planet, and most importantly, the
corona war. Very few doctors and chemists know the history of HCQ, chloroquine and quinine.
The documentary deals a lot with this suppression of HCQ, with full cooperation of doctors around the world, while pushing the dangerous drug remdesivir. From 1:08:00 onwards, it features when President Trump in March 2020 miraculously obtained tens of millions of doses of HCQ, and BARDA and FDA members sabotaged efforts to release HCQ to the public during a time of national emergency, claiming “no randomised studies” had been done, and only “anecdotal” stories of its benefits. Rick Bright of BARDA f.i. claimed to have no knowledge of HCQ. The documentary reveals how Janet Woodcock, who was President of the FDA at the time and sat on the board of the NEJM, had already been
active in suppressing quinine for 27 years! Bright and Woodcock conspired that HCQ got EUA status so doctors could not give HCQ to their patients outside of hospitals, when it would be too late.
Around 42 mins, he goes into clinical trials and concludes it’s really a scam. My friend works for Pfizer and told me that, “of course, Pfizer gets only the results it wants from the trials it carries out.”
From 1:28:18 and onwards, he goes into what type of person would gaslight patients when they came to doctors for help, but were laughed at and trivialized. He uses the term “narcissists” as an entire category just for doctors and nurses. (Last weekend I was at a dinner party seated next to an oncology surgeon from the Netherlands, who complained he was still dead tired all the time after having contracted Covid in early 2020. I asked him if he had gotten the injections, and he said that he had had two. When I began to mention he might benefit from taking certain supplements as documented by serious doctors and medical researchers, he looked at me and laughed derisively at me. I abandoned the subject immediately).
At 1:46:15, Davidson asks how the system can stop a treatment that works and substitute it with a gene-treatment that doesn’t, and mentions:
-Mass media;
-Physicians in general have become so dependent on corporate employment that they don’t want to rock the boat;
-Since the events of 2020 there has been a concerted effort across all media, medicine and academia to whitewash what was done to the people;
-The propaganda tricks they used are still employed:
* A fringe French study from 2ndJanuary 2024 concludes that HCQ killed nearly 17,000 people. The study only looked at hospitalized patients and refuses to look at early use. The study does not answer the clinical questions.
* In France, HCQ used to be sold OTC, but in October 2019, the French FDA classified HCQ as prescription-only. He wonders if more countries did that, prior to 2020. (I know that f.i. Portugal, Belgium and Italy changed to prescription only in May 2020, following the
retracted Lancet study of 22nd May 2020.)