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Either winner will lead a nation awake to the dangers of the pharmaceutical complex. We have learned that the checks and balances we had assumed ensure that only safe drugs get approved do not exist.
From readers of RFK, Jr.'s bestseller The Real Anthony Fauci, which exposed royalties enriching government employees who align with pharma companies, to the parents declining HPV vaccines for their kids for safety reasons, to New Yorkers surprised that Bill di Blasio urged them to get COVID vaccines alongside free French fries, to those aware that our tax dollars pay for weight loss drug Ozempic — Americans don't have to be "anti-vaxxers" to feel that Big Pharma reform is needed.
What actions can a new President take to ensure this?
1/ Repeal the PREP Act.
Some legislation seems great at first but proves to be destructive, such as the 2005 PREP (Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedness) Act.
This Act lets HHS provide immunity to drug companies from liability.
Thus, pharmaceutical "countermeasures" – some drugs — are not like automobiles, trampolines, or McDonald's hot coffee. You cannot sue the manufacturer.
HHS designated the "free French fries" COVID-19 vaccines as "medical countermeasures."
To extend the injection's protections, HHS Secretary Becerra amended the PREP Act during COVID.
While that was happening, thousands of people sustained COVID vaccine injuries, even as our health agencies assured us that they were "safe and effective."
To this day, the injured can't sue. Imagine a PREP Act equivalent for the automobile industry. If a car malfunctioned, injuring you or killing a loved one, you would have nowhere to turn.