Thursday, April 21, 2022

Phil Harper's Ivermectin Series

Well, it's about time that I stepped into the breach and discussed Ivermectin. The social media protocols and propaganda surrounding Ivermectin have been fascinating. In this blog, I've tried to steer clear of Ivermectin because I'm simply not qualified to talk about it. What I'm going to do, however, is recommend that everyone read Phil Harper's series on Ivermectin. Harper is an investigative journalist and filmmaker. The Digger is his substack.com site, and he has done us all a great favor with his ongoing Ivermectin series. 

Harper is eminently readable; it's all non-technical writing. He has uncovered some absolutely damning material regarding a particular key Ivermectin paper. I would be doing him a disservice by attempting much of a summary. His summaries are absolutely clear and to the point, so check them out. Suffice it to say that Harper has pinned down ghostwriting of an academic paper via writing analyses and metadata analyses. His reveals are so irrefutably damning, all I can say is go to The Digger and read. The articles on Ivermectin are currently sharable. A subscription to The Digger is just seven dollars a month and well worth it. Please review his series (they are all quick reads), and I'll revisit Harper in a week or two.


My Take on Phil Harper

If what Harper reports is true, it indicts American academia, the pharmaceutical industry, and American health care institutions, along with WHO. Putting aside the absolute truth or falsity of what Harper reports, however, here's what bothers me.

Harper's research should be debated front and center on every major news network in perpetuity. He should have been interviewed by 60 Minutes. Instead, searches of CNN, MSNBC, and The New York Times yield no Phil Harper/Ivermectin results. How can this be? Harper's investigation uncovered evidence of ubiquitous coordinated corruption of American academia and health care organizations throughout the pandemic. How can this not be newsworthy?

Daniel Horowitz's Apple podcast featured Harper on March 10, so Harper's not an unknown. With American news companies grinding for every shred of newsworthy fodder, the idea that Harper's findings have gone unreported by corporate media is stunning.  As I have said repeatedly in this blog, it's the absence of reportage that is usually the most obvious exercise of propaganda. 

Welcome to the American Ivermectin prism.



Bob Dietz

April 21, 2022