Wildturkey12
Poster
From what I’ve read, the advisory board and public comment are recommended but not required. It’s stupid but the regulations give broad discretionary authority to the HHS Secretary/FDA leadership. I wonder why?Hello All - I could use a bit of help from my research team here once again.
A few days ago I heard Robert Malone say on the war room that the FDA did not send the Pfizer vaccine approval to an advisory board, as is normally protocol for approval, and that they didn’t allow for public comment, which is also protocol. Is this documented anywhere?
Further, I just had a friend tell me that 96% of doctors are vaccinated. Is that accurate? I had heard that that number was much lower. Does anyone have evidence that it is lower?
I appreciate any help I can get in advance! Thank you!
as for the 96% of doctors being vaccinated, I remember that poll. It was from the AMA, see below for the link to the actual full results. It came out a couple of months ago but was complete bullshit as the sample size was 300. To say that 96% of ALL doctors are vaccinated because 300 doctors responded to a survey is absolutely ridiculous. I’m sure there are a ton of doctors out there that are super excited to reveal their vaccine hesitancy since they definitely wouldn’t be targeted. It’s funny if you actually read the full results, you see that the doctors that hadn’t been vaccinated are for very legitimate reasons that MSM/leftists try to hand waive, which is that the vaccine has unknown long term effects and potentially dangerous side effects.
link to bullshit AMA poll: https://www.ama-assn.org/system/files/2021-06/physician-vaccination-study-topline-report.pdf
I think there should be a law that says any poll and headline related to that poll should include the words “OF THOSE SURVEYED” next to whatever bullshit number they are trying to sell. Id estimate that greater than 60% of the normies in this country somehow believes that a poll of usually less than 1000 people actually represents the beliefs of the entire population. Polls are incredibly biased and unreliable, regardless of whatever “random sampling” and “margin of error” the pollsters claim. See the 2016 and 2020 elections for proof.