Igor Chudov's excellent recent stack on Fauci's clearly 'conflicted of interest' wife at NIH who oversaw his research, now we have Fauci's NIAID replacement Hugh Auchincloss's daughter Kalah
Tony Fauci’s wife, Christine Grady, is a director of Bioethics at the NIH, imagine that, what corruption; works for is an “FDA Consulting firm Greenleaf
The corruption in America’s alphabet health agencies and regulators know no bounds, the CDC, NIH, FDA, and NIAID, such a quartet of corruptible IMO high-crime people, bandits to me, just people with no moral compass, no concern for the health and well-being of the American population. Just their fat cat money and enriching themselves. Corrupted people! Should be investigated, every decision, going back 40 years, and held accountable if shown decisions were wrong and reckless and hurt people.
‘The firm that Kalah Auchincloss works for is an “FDA Consulting firm,” which consults pharmaceutical companies on how to access the FDA. (Kalah previously held senior positions at the FDA.) Areas of expertise for Greenleaf Health include “Cell & Gene Therapy” related services, “regulatory policy services,” and more. Paying Greenleaf is a way to get the doors open at the FDA.
So while her dad Hugh would be heading the NIAID, Kalah would get paid nicely for “expediting access” to the FDA for gene therapy-related companies, regulatory requests, etc.’
Nice piece from Igor, great scholarship:
Well we must never stop calling out the collusion, the dishonesty the crimes and illegal manipulation of these institutions. But believe me the doors to the FDA were kicked open decades ago. For any historians, interested in reading details Dr. Breggin‘s two books, Toxic psychiatry, and the book we co-authored together, talking back to Prozac is a complete education on door kicking. Thank you Paul and Igor for carrying the torch of honesty integrity and genuine science.
Grady also designs the "studies" that need certain outcomes, even those that are redesigned to alter the outcomes and points of departure - case in point: remdesivir.