Among the obvious reasons to avoid toxic medical drugs and vaccines—like wanting to live—there is this cherry on the cake:
If you could examine all the ingredients in all the medical drugs and vaccines in the US, you’d discover that 70 to 80% come from foreign manufacturers.
BANG.
The US FDA carries out inspections of foreign facilities. But challenges stand in the way.
Language differences, for instance. And for some incomprehensible reason, the FDA typically gives advance notice of their inspections—allowing foreign companies time to make things look good and hide problems. And crimes.
The whole idea of trusting many foreign manufacturers thousands of miles away, under the jurisdiction of their highly questionable government agencies—the US having little to no ability to ferret out deals and payoffs made between those agencies and manufacturers—sheer insanity.
But there it is.
And as I’ve detailed for many years, the US FDA itself is one the most corrupt agencies of the federal government.
Here are a couple of foreign scandals to chew on.
Ranbaxy Labs, a huge drug maker in India supplying the US. In 2008, the FDA did find a few major crimes. Lying about data, lying about records, sub-par testing of products. Oops.
But get this. For FIVE more years, until 2013, Ranbaxy kept shipping meds to the US and nobody stopped them. Finally, the company pled guilty to crimes and paid a $500 million fine.
Here’s another one. Changzhou, a drug maker in China. In 2008, the US FDA inspected the manufacturing facility and basically said, “We know something is wrong, but we don’t know what it is.”
The geniuses at the FDA knew there was a problem because the year BEFORE, in 2007, the company WAS KNOWN to have exported Heparin, a blood thinner, to the US, where it KILLED PATIENTS.
But in 2008, the FDA couldn’t find the cause of the problem.
Which meant the Chinese company could continue to sell killer Heparin!
Finally, perhaps later in 2008, bigger multiple inspections were done, and it was discovered that the Chinese company was intentionally and criminally placing a cheap compound in the drug. It was the killer.