Writing

Writings on social engineering and other things

by Virginia “Ginny” Stoner, MA, JD

~~~

Index of topics on this blog

Join my free mailing list

Posts in Vaccine Fraud
ChatGPT on the childhood vaccine schedule: soothing lies

If you were a parent looking for information about the childhood vaccine schedule, could the new “artificially intelligent” virtual tool ChatGPT help? You bet! I investigated and found out ChatGPT is working hard to minimize vaccine hesitancy, by telling people their precious little one will get far fewer vaccines than are actually in store for them. If you catch Chat’s lies, it will come clean—sort of. Here I make multiple attempts to wrangle something resembling truth about the vaccine schedule out of ChatGPT.

Read More
Vaccinated versus unvaccinated: CDC numbers suggest…hmm

With preventing COVID19 infection and transmission both off the table as possible benefits of vaccination (not that they were ever really there, but…), the only possible benefit left is preventing severe cases of COVID19. I hope we can all agree that death is the most severe of severe cases. In this paper, I look at vaccinated and unvaccinated US COVID19 death data collected by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). I don’t know how reliable it is—I’m just showing you what’s there, and pointing out some of its obvious limitations, based on the CDC’s own descriptions. As you’ll see, the data is far more ambiguous than glowing—the sort of data that makes you go, "hmm.”

Read More
Poul Thorsen, the least wanted Most Wanted man in the world

Paul Thorsen is a medical doctor and researcher who’s been on the Office of Inspector General’s Most Wanted Fugitives list for nearly a decade, accused of stealing CDC research funds—but no one seems to really want him. I feel a little bad for picking on Dr. Thorsen—he’s just a faux scapegoat in a faux prosecution designed to make it look as though vaccine research fraud is rare and seriously frowned upon.

Read More
Trolls, true believers, and other lying liars

In spite of convincing evidence of the mass-vaccination campaign in the US during the Spanish flu, most people don’t know the vaccines even existed. Why? Because there’s an ongoing conspiracy to conceal it. Sometimes this results in creepy dark hilarity, as industry trolls and true believers struggle to come up with an explanation for the obvious lies about Spanish flu vaccines.

Read More
Unborn children who died after COVID19 vaccination

When I first started keeping track of the CDC’s statement on deaths reported to VAERS from COVID19 vaccines in the US, the number of deaths the CDC said were reported was hundreds higher than the number of deaths reported according to my VAERS search. Now, it’s over 1800 deaths higher. Why? Is it possible the CDC is including over 1400 fetal deaths reported to VAERS from COVID19 vaccines?

Read More
Update: How to hide thousands of vaccine deaths in plain sight

In February, I wrote about an unexpected place where the CDC can conceal tens of thousands of vaccine deaths—in its tally of “Deaths Involving COVID19.” This is an update on the situation, which has continued to escalate, with hundreds of deaths involving COVID19 reported to VAERS each month. I also look at historical data from the CDC’s tally—which points to complete and utter vaccine failure—or worse.

Read More
Update on the deadly Covid-19 vaccine coverup -- Plus, how to estimate risk better than the CDC

More deaths have been reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) from the covid shots than from all other vaccines combined for the last 30 years. Don’t expect to hear this stunning fact on the evening news, or read about it in a CDC advisory or covid shot consent form.

Read More
When ‘One-in-a-Million’ Really Means One-in-a-Hundred and Other Vaccine Chicanery

The HRSA’s “1 in a million” vaccine risk finding is being used deceptively to create a perception that vaccines are extraordinarily safe, when in fact, the finding actually indicates the risk of serious vaccine injury for a fully vaccinated child is at least 1 in 10,000, and may be as high as 1 in 100.

Read More