We live in a corrupted system. The way to tackle corruption is to first acknowledge it exists. Only then is it possible to come up with ways of dealing with it, but don't make the mistake of believing the system can or will uncorrupt itself.

Interesting Links

Here you’ll find links to websites, articles and videos that might prove interesting and helpful.

Callum Smiles Media

Callum Smiles is an independent journalist who is going to Davos in January 2024 to report on this year’s WEF annual meeting where they invite Government representatives, corporate partners, NGO staff, and people in positions of influence to discuss and plan the implementation of the State Of The World they want. Callum also reports on other topics the mainstream media refuse to cover honestly, or at all.

Pfizer Documents

The “Public Health and Medical Professionals for Transparency” website has a section where all the Pfizer documents being released each month by the FDA that they initially refused to release and then wanted 75 years to release, are being released a chunk at a time each month. Much of it is uninformative, but there are some very revealing datasets and reports included.

UK Coronavirus Yellow Card Reporting Site

The website where all suspected side effects to medicines, vaccines, medical device and test kit incidents used in coronavirus testing and treatment are reported to the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency)

US OpenVAERS Project

VAERS is the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System in the United States set up in 1990. It is a voluntary reporting system that has been estimated to account for only 1% (report here) of vaccine injuries. OpenVAERS is built from the HHS data available for download at vaers.hhs.gov.

VigiAccess™

VigiAccess was launched by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2015 to provide public access to information in VigiBase which is the WHO global database of reported potential side effects of medicinal products.

OpenPrescribing

This is a system for exploring and analysing England’s GP prescription data in a more convenient way than downloading 700,000,000+ row CSV files.

Espacenet

This site has free access to over 130 million patent documents.