The Exposé published an article on January 1, 2025, which presents an interview with Dennis Rancourt discussing the COVID-19 pandemic. Rancourt argues that the pandemic was manipulated by those in power to control populations instead of protecting public health. He claims that most medical trials were false and funded by the industry, and he introduces the idea of "biological stress-induced transmissionless spontaneous bacterial pneumonia" as a key aspect of COVID-19.
Rancourt analyzes all-cause mortality rates, suggesting that excess mortality existed before vaccines were rolled out and that there was no spread of a pathogen since mortality rates did not rise in neighboring areas after death hotspots. He highlights that local government policies and hospital practices played a significant role in determining death rates, particularly pointing to heavy use of mechanical ventilators in specific regions like Northern Italy and New York City, which he believes contributed to higher mortality.
Rancourt criticizes the treatment of elderly and frail individuals, explaining that isolation and the disruption of their care routines led to increased deaths. He compares the situation to a "military campaign" to roll out vaccines without considering the consequences.
Motivations behind the pandemic response aimed to exert control over the population and inject vaccines into individuals, rather than prevent virus spread. Rancourt believes government measures, such as mandatory masks and isolation, were tools for greater surveillance and control over citizens. He argues that the pandemic response's true motives were to oppress people rather than protect health.
Rancourt stresses that censorship and the dominance of certain institutions lead to societal oppression and health issues, connecting the stress from dominance hierarchies to increased mortality among disadvantaged groups. He notes that responses to perceived threats can drive populations toward authoritarianism.
He recalls historical scores of pandemics being linked to societal collapse caused by environmental factors or conflicts, suggesting the same for COVID-19. He also points out that societal disruptions negatively affect health, with poor and undernourished populations suffering more during such crises.
The article mentions that Rancourt believes antibiotics like ivermectin could have effectively treated bacterial infections misdiagnosed as viral, thus saving lives during the pandemic.
The Exposé urges readers to support their journalism efforts, stating that they rely on reader donations to continue reporting facts that mainstream media allegedly ignores.
https://expose-news.com/2025/01/01/the-covid-19-pandemic-was-an-illusion/
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