By LINDA BOYLE
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against Pfizer’s Covid shot in November for “unlawfully misrepresenting the effectiveness of the company’s Covid-19 vaccine and attempting to censor public discussion of the product.”
Paxton’s alleged Pfizer made “unsupported claims” and made the public think the protection from the “vaccine” was durable. Additionally, information was withheld from the public, while Pfizer used a campaign of intimidation to con people into believing they were doing the right thing to protect their loved ones. Paxton said this was in violation of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practice Act. The lawsuit is still pending.
Just recently, Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach also sued Pfizer, alleging the company “made misleading claims” about the effectiveness and safety of the shot and the potential side-effects. Kobach says Pfizer provided misinformation and misled Kansas citizens into believing the shot had minimal side effects, and that the company hid information concerning the shot’s link to myocarditis and pregnancy complications. Kobach said Pfizer misled Kansans by telling them the shot was effective, even while it knew its “effectiveness” waned over time. Nor did the shot protect against all the variants the Covid virus spins off.
Kobach went on to state that Covid-19 cases continued to rise even after a widespread vaccination push in which some areas saw more deaths of vaccinated persons than those not vaccinated.
The lawsuit notes: “How did Pfizer respond when it became apparent that its vaccine was failing, and the viability of its cash cow shot was threatened? By intimidating those spreading the truth and by conspiring to censor its critics, Pfizer labeled as ‘criminals’ those who spread facts about the vaccine. It accused them of spreading ‘misinformation.’ And it coerced social media platforms to silence prominent truth-tellers.”
Kansas seeks from Pfizer, “civil monetary penalties, damages, and injunctive relief from misleading and deceptive statements made in marketing its COVID-19 vaccine.” In the complaint, Kobach alleges Pfizer deliberately hid, suppressed and omitted material facts relating to the COVID-19 vaccine. The “most egregious” facts dealt with safety of pregnant women and problems with heart conditions. Add to this the fact the shots weren’t effective with new variants, nor did the jab even stop viral transmission.
“Pfizer marketed its vaccine as safe for pregnant women,” Kobach said. “However, in February of 2021 (they) possessed reports of 458 pregnant women who received Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine during pregnancy. More than half of the pregnant women reported an adverse event, and more than 10% reported a miscarriage.”
There have indeed been research reports on pregnancy and miscarriages. Some government reports stated there was no higher risk for “vaccinated” Covid women. Other research reports showed there was an increase in major maternal child side-effects.
Pfizer had started a research project on pregnant women but ended the study prior to completion. The research project was overcome by events as the government had already stated the jab was okay for pregnant wome,n despite having limited data to support that conclusion. And pregnant women believed they were doing the right thing, rolling up their sleeves.
In June of 2021, the CDC warned that the Covid jab was having a negative effect on the heart such as myocarditis and pericarditis, especially in young men.
Yet when Albert Bourla, Pfizer CEO, was asked in January, 2023 if the jab caused severe myocarditis, he said, “We have not seen a single signal, although we have distributed billions of doses.”
“However, Pfizer knew the United States government, the United States military, foreign governments and others have found that Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine caused myocarditis and pericarditis,” Attorney General Kobach said.
Kobach also pointed out this was a cash cow for Pfizer. The company “earned $75 billion in just two years thanks to its ‘misrepresentation’ of the vaccine.”
Pfizer has claimed “the lawsuit AG Kobach is without merit.” “The representations made by Pfizer about its Covid-19 vaccine have been accurate and science-based,” the company said in a statement.
But Kobach says that five additional states will be joining his lawsuit—the only confirmed state of the five is Idaho.
Who wants to bet Alaska won’t be one of the five? As the truth keeps coming out through Congressional hearings etc., more and more lawsuits will surely follow.
Linda Boyle, RN, MSN, DM, was formerly the chief nurse for the 3rd Medical Group, JBER, and was the interim director of the Alaska VA. Most recently, she served as Director for Central Alabama VA Healthcare System. She is the director of the Alaska Covid Alliance.