mercatornet.com
2023-03-19
Two thousand five hundred years ago the Greek playwright Aeschylus is reputed to have said "the first victim of war is truth." Recent events in the academic world have demonstrated that truth is also a casualty when ideology and commercial interests are at stake.
The most recent case occurred last month at Laval University in Canada, when professor and RNA expert Patrick Provost was suspended without pay for anti-mRNA vaccine comments. Patrick Provost has run an RNA lab for 20 years and has published nearly 100 peer-reviewed studies. In 2003, Provost's work on the role of microRNA in gene expression was named one of the 10 discoveries of the year by the Quebec Science Magazine.
Based on the government's own hospitalization and mortality statistics for children, which are both very low, Provost said he believed the risks of Covid-19 vaccination in children could outweigh the benefits because of the potential side-effects from mRNA vaccines, which have only gone through two of the usual four stages of testing required before vaccines are approved for general use.
"I was just doing what I was hired to do," he said in an interview. "I had some concerns about something, I searched the literature and I prepared a talk and I delivered it to the public. Being censored for doing what I've been trained to do -- and hired to do -- well, it's hard to believe."
"As soon as you raise some concerns about vaccines, or side-effects, or complications related to vaccines, then it's worse than the N-word," he continued. "You're condemned by the media, by the government and you're chased and put down .... We should be able to discuss any ideas -- any opinions -- and because I expressed opinions that went against the government narrative, I was suspended."