I think the angle law firms are looking at is intentional medical malpractice by knowingly marketing a "vaccine" with incredibly dangerous side effects. That would nullify the consent agreement Astra Zeneca required when people received the vaccine. Also the blatant obfuscation of those side effects by hiding them away behind a QR code within the vaccine packaging and mountains of legalese sprinkled with medical terminology
You may have a point but the rug will be pulled only if the plan allows it (they will fess up to it if event 201 holds true). I've red the leaked vaccine contracts and it's made clear that in case of a faulty product that fails safety and efficacy standards, the contract is void.
Problem is since the gene shots were classified as a bio-warafre counter-measure commissioned by the military, the FDA standards are not the same as with regular drugs on the market. I don't think the FDA had any say in the regulation at all - instead they were just used as a front as to deceive people into thinking this is business as usual.
I think the angle law firms are looking at is intentional medical malpractice by knowingly marketing a "vaccine" with incredibly dangerous side effects. That would nullify the consent agreement Astra Zeneca required when people received the vaccine. Also the blatant obfuscation of those side effects by hiding them away behind a QR code within the vaccine packaging and mountains of legalese sprinkled with medical terminology
You may have a point but the rug will be pulled only if the plan allows it (they will fess up to it if event 201 holds true). I've red the leaked vaccine contracts and it's made clear that in case of a faulty product that fails safety and efficacy standards, the contract is void.
Problem is since the gene shots were classified as a bio-warafre counter-measure commissioned by the military, the FDA standards are not the same as with regular drugs on the market. I don't think the FDA had any say in the regulation at all - instead they were just used as a front as to deceive people into thinking this is business as usual.