Former Pfizer Vice President Blows the Whistle: “The Vaccine is Deadly”


The project was to be called One More Girl.  This was actually a play on a Merck Gardasil campaign from earlier in the decade, One Less Girl.  The public relations agent at Merck who came up with that slogan for Gardasil actually won an award for it because of the interest it generated in Gardasil and its fight against cervical cancer.

They decided at one point or another after researching the industry and the medication that the story was really much bigger and much more sinister than initially apprehended.  They began a fundraising campaign to finance the film.  After nearly 600 donors raised more than $42,000 for the project (mostly “angry mothers,” according to the two filmmakers) a teaser was put together and made public for everyone to see.  Their hopes, according to the Richardson brothers was to make the film free for the viewing in order to warn every one of the dangers of the vaccine.

Honolulu Weekly did a big expose on the pair:

The One More Girl project / Why would two young men make a documentary about women’s health? For brothers Ryan and David Richardson, who live in Honolulu, the personal became the political. A year-and-a-half ago, the Richardsons’ teenage sister, Donielle, was administered a shot of Gardasil, one of the human papilloma virus vaccines on the market that aim to protect women 26 years old and younger against cervical cancer through a series of three shots. What happened immediately following that first shot was frightening. Donielle’s eyes rolled to the back of her head. She started convulsing. Donielle had a seizure. While her recovery was arduous for the Richardson family, Donielle is now healthy.

However, other young women haven’t been as fortunate. The scare the Richardson family experienced led them to research the potential dangers of Gardasil. Little did they know they would tap into a flood of what they and other advocates see as Gardasil-related injuries and even deaths.
The brothers connected with national advocacy groups Truth About Gardasil and S.A.N.E. Vax, Inc., and made it their mission to document the stories of Gardasil’s victims, many of whom struggle with debt incurred by medical bills, permanent autoimmune disorders and the deaths of their young daughters.
While Gardasil’s manufacturer, Merck, says there is no connection between Gardasil and the alleged adverse effects its critics describe, Ryan points out, “People don’t just fall over dead.”

One More Girl will be the name of the planned documentary–a riff on Merck’s “One Less Girl” Gardasil campaign, which won 2007 Brand of the Year by Pharmaceutical Executive for “creating a market out of thin air.”

So who are the hundreds of people nationwide rooting for the Richardsons’ film?

“A lot of angry moms,” says David. Mothers of Gardasil victims have been holding mini fundraisers such as bake sales in hopes of making the Richardsons’ documentary a reality. The Richardson brothers are also in pre-production, gathering their long list of potential interviewees and continuing to research Gardasil. They hope to film cross-country, including Hawaii, this summer, with the hope of releasing the film in 2012.

“It’s not about the money,” the Richardsons say. “We even want to put the film online for free so people know about this.”

Then, just one year later in 2012, the pair of brothers inexplicably disappeared.  One More Girl, and its accompanying social media accounts at Twitter and Facebook, as well as its online presence, were deleted and no more was heard from the pair.  In fact, the $42K raised online through Kickstarter fundraising site still exists, but the last communication on the site from the filmmakers’ update in 2012.

Needless to say, many of the donors are angry and demanded answers…for years…to no avail.  Many are now beginning to wonder if big pharma got them and threatened with legal proceedings or simply paid them a very large settlement amount to shut up and end the project.  Either way, that project has essentially been halted.

Here is the teaser that they released as the Kickstarter fundraising site had promised.

Dr. Peter Rost former vice president of Pfizer describes the corrupt of the medical industry:

Source:  Health Nut News 1 / HNN 2 / Honolulu Weekly



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