Swine Flu & COVID: The Vaccine Mistakes Repeated

Swine Flu & COVID

Why This Isn’t Academic for Me

I don’t write about vaccine policy, medical ethics, or institutional failure from a place of abstraction. I write about it because these systems have touched—and ended—the lives of people in my family.

In 1976, my grandfather took the swine flu vaccine during the nationwide rollout. Two weeks later, he died. Like many families at the time, we were told it was coincidence, unfortunate timing, and ultimately unknowable. The vaccination program itself was later halted, but there was no meaningful reckoning for those already affected. The questions our family had were never answered—only deferred.

Nearly fifty years later, history felt impossible to ignore.

My father was living in a nursing home when he received multiple COVID vaccinations along with a flu shot. Within months, his health deteriorated rapidly. He developed serious nervous system and mobility issues, declined quickly, and died within six months.

As with my grandfather, there was no clear investigation, no transparent discussion of risk, and no institutional willingness to even entertain the possibility that medical intervention might have played a role. What we encountered instead was silence, procedural deflection, and a familiar insistence that correlation must not be discussed—let alone examined.

I am not claiming certainty. I am not claiming intent. I am not claiming that every adverse outcome is caused by vaccination.

What I am claiming is this:
When medical systems discourage questioning, shield themselves from liability, and treat uncertainty as a threat rather than a reality, families like mine are left without answers—twice, across two generations.

That is why the comparison between the 1976 swine flu vaccination program and the COVID response is not theoretical to me. It is lived history. It is personal loss repeated under different circumstances, by the same kinds of institutional failures.

Coronafraud.com exists because institutions rarely document their own mistakes honestly—especially when doing so carries legal, financial, or reputational risk. When that happens, memory fades, records are sanitized, and families are left to piece together what happened on their own.

This work is not driven by anger.

It is driven by responsibility—to remember, to question, and to insist that “public health” never again mean unaccountable power over private lives.

Introduction: Two Crises, One Institutional Pattern

Public health rarely gets a clean second chance. When it does, the expectation is that past failures inform future decisions. Yet the COVID vaccine rollout revealed something troubling: the lessons of the 1976 swine flu vaccination program were not just forgotten—they were structurally ignored.

In 1976, the U.S. rushed a nationwide vaccination campaign in response to a feared pandemic that never materialized. Adverse events emerged, public trust collapsed, and the program was halted. It was later studied as a textbook example of how panic, politics, and liability distortion can override scientific caution.

Nearly fifty years later, during COVID, the same institutional dynamics reappeared—this time globally, digitally amplified, and backed by unprecedented financial and political power.

This article examines how swine flu and COVID are connected not by biology, but by governance failure.

1. Pandemic Prediction vs. Pandemic Reality

The 1976 swine flu episode began at Fort Dix, where a novel influenza strain infected soldiers. One death triggered fears of a replay of the 1918 Spanish Flu.

Public health leaders chose preemption over observation.

COVID followed a similar arc:

  • Early models projected catastrophic outcomes

  • Worst-case scenarios dominated decision-making

  • Policy hardened before long-term data existed

In both cases, projection replaced proportion, and uncertainty was treated as unacceptable rather than inevitable.

2. Political Urgency as a Substitute for Scientific Restraint

In 1976, the vaccination program carried the direct backing of Gerald Ford. The political risk of being wrong was perceived as lower than the political risk of appearing inactive.

During COVID, the same calculus played out globally:

  • Speed became proof of leadership

  • Questioning timelines was framed as sabotage

  • Policy reversals were delayed to preserve authority

Public health shifted from risk management to reputational defense.

3. Liability Shields: The Incentive That Never Changed

One of the clearest parallels between swine flu and COVID is who carried the risk.

1976 Swine Flu

Manufacturers refused participation without immunity. The federal government absorbed liability. When injuries surfaced, taxpayers paid.

COVID

Pharmaceutical companies again received broad liability protection. Compensation systems were narrow, slow, and opaque.

This design flaw matters because immunity from consequences alters behavior. When downside risk is removed, speed and scale are rewarded over caution and transparency.

4. Adverse Events: Dismissal First, Acknowledgment Later

The 1976 program unraveled after increased cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome appeared among recipients. Initial responses downplayed the signal. Only sustained evidence forced action.

COVID followed a similar trajectory:

The problem was not that adverse events existed.
It was that institutions resisted seeing them.

5. Messaging Failure: Certainty Over Credibility

After swine flu, public confidence in health authorities suffered for decades. One reason was messaging that allowed no room for error.

COVID repeated that mistake:

  • Safe and effective” became an absolute claim

  • Uncertainty was treated as a threat

  • Policy changes eroded earlier assurances

History shows that overconfidence destroys trust faster than bad outcomes.

6. One-Size-Fits-All Policy, Twice

In 1976, vaccination was broadly recommended despite uneven risk.

During COVID, mandates extended to:

  • Young adults

  • Children

  • Previously infected individuals

Risk stratification came late, if at all. Public health favored compliance simplicity over biological nuance—a tradeoff that proved costly.

7. Dissent Was Managed, Not Integrated

Post-1976 reviews revealed internal disagreement that never meaningfully slowed the program.

During COVID, dissent moved into the open—and was actively suppressed. Doctors and researchers questioning mandates, timelines, or transparency were censored, deplatformed, or professionally sanctioned.

Healthy systems absorb criticism. Fragile ones silence it.

8. The Defining Difference: Knowing When to Stop

Here is where the two crises diverge sharply:

  • 1976: The vaccination program was halted once harm became undeniable.

  • COVID: Programs expanded—boosters, mandates, passports—even as risk profiles shifted.

That single difference explains why COVID remains unresolved socially, politically, and psychologically.

Stopping requires humility.
Expansion requires certainty.

9. Why the Lesson Was Lost

The swine flu failure should have reshaped public health permanently. It didn’t, because:

  • Institutional memory faded

  • Financial incentives grew

  • Media rewarded certainty

  • Bureaucracies optimized for scale

What was once a warning became a footnote.

10. Swine Flu Was the Dress Rehearsal. COVID Was the Main Event.

The 1976 swine flu vaccine program was not a conspiracy. Neither was COVID.

Both were system failures—driven by fear, insulated by liability shields, and protected by institutional defensiveness.

The tragedy is not that mistakes were made.
It’s that they were made again, despite a clear historical precedent.

If public health wants trust restored, it must do what it avoided in both eras:

  • Admit uncertainty

  • Accept accountability

  • Protect dissent

  • Learn publicly

Otherwise, the next crisis will look familiar—because the system that created it never changed.

Medical Corruption at Industrial Scale: COVID Vaccine Fallout

Introduction: A Question That Refuses to Go Away

Few questions provoke more anger—or more fear—than this one: Were the COVID vaccines genocide?
It’s a question increasingly asked not only by activists on the fringes, but by ordinary people who watched institutions contradict themselves, silence critics, and later revise “settled science.”  Did we not learn anything from the Swine Flu vaccine in 1976?  

The answer matters, because how we classify what happened during COVID determines whether the world learns from it—or repeats it.

This article does not argue that a secret cabal plotted mass extermination. It does argue that the COVID vaccine rollout exposed medical corruption at industrial scale—a convergence of corporate profit, regulatory capture, censorship, and moral failure that caused preventable harm and shattered public trust.

1. Genocide Requires Intent — Corruption Requires Opportunity

Under international law, genocide requires intent: a coordinated effort to destroy a population group.

There is no documented evidence that world governments or pharmaceutical companies organized mRNA vaccination campaigns with explicit intent to kill.

However, focusing solely on intent can be misleading.

History shows that catastrophic harm often results not from hatred, but from:

What occurred during COVID aligns far more closely with systemic corruption than with classic genocide—yet the human cost remains severe.

2. Regulatory Capture: When Watchdogs Become Partners

The modern pharmaceutical system depends on regulators acting independently. During COVID, that independence was widely questioned.

Agencies such as the FDA and CDC were tasked with evaluating products from corporations like Pfizer and Moderna—the same corporations receiving unprecedented public funding and liability shields.

Key concerns raised by critics included:

  • Emergency Use Authorization based on short trial windows

  • Delayed or redacted release of raw clinical trial data

  • Revolving doors between regulators and industry

  • Limited public debate over alternative risk-benefit profiles by age and sex

This dynamic is known as regulatory capture—when agencies serve industry interests as much as, or more than, public welfare.

3. Censorship and the Collapse of Scientific Debate

Science advances through disagreement. COVID policy advanced through enforcement.

Doctors, epidemiologists, and statisticians who questioned:

  • Mandates for low-risk populations

  • Natural immunity comparisons

  • Long-term safety surveillance

  • One-size-fits-all policies

were often labeled “misinformation” and removed from platforms, journals, or professional positions.

Social media companies worked directly with governments to suppress dissenting views—many of which later proved partially or fully correct.

This environment didn’t eliminate bad science.
It eliminated peer review in real time.

4. Post-Rollout Signals That Couldn’t Be Ignored

As mass vaccination campaigns expanded globally, new data emerged that deserved transparent analysis—yet often received dismissal instead.

a) Excess Mortality

Several countries reported all-cause mortality spikes that did not correlate neatly with COVID waves. While causation remains contested, the signals warranted open investigation rather than reflexive denial.

b) Cardiac Events

Myocarditis and pericarditis—particularly among young males—were eventually acknowledged by regulators after initial minimization. Risk levels remain debated, but the delay in acknowledgment eroded trust.

c) Reproductive and Menstrual Effects

Menstrual irregularities, fertility concerns, and pregnancy questions were initially brushed aside, then later recognized as real and statistically observable—though generally described as temporary.

d) Underreporting Systems

Systems like VAERS were publicly labeled unreliable while simultaneously serving as official safety monitoring tools—creating confusion and skepticism.

None of this proves malicious intent.
All of it proves institutional defensiveness.

5. Liability Shields and the Moral Hazard Problem

Pharmaceutical companies received:

  • Guaranteed government purchase contracts

  • Immunity from standard product liability lawsuits

  • Accelerated approval pathways

This created a moral hazard: massive upside with minimal downside.

When harm occurs in such systems, accountability becomes diffuse:

  • Companies blame regulators

  • Regulators cite emergency conditions

  • Politicians claim expert reliance

The result is a vacuum where no one is responsible—even when lives are lost.

6. Genocide vs. Crimes Against Humanity: A Moral Distinction

Calling the COVID vaccine rollout “genocide” may be legally inaccurate—but dismissing the outrage behind the word misses the point.

Under the spirit of post-World War II medical ethics, particularly the Nuremberg Code, several red flags emerged:

  • Coercion through mandates

  • Lack of long-term safety data

  • Suppression of informed consent discussion

  • Punishment of dissenting physicians

When populations are pressured into medical interventions under threat of job loss, travel bans, or social exclusion—without transparent risk disclosure—the moral line is crossed.

Not into genocide.
But into systemic ethical failure.

7. Why Trust Collapsed — and Why It Matters

Public health depends on credibility. Once lost, it is extraordinarily difficult to rebuild.

COVID taught millions of people that:

  • “Safe and effective” can change definitions

  • “Follow the science” can mean “follow authority”

  • Dissent can be punished even when evidence evolves

This erosion of trust now affects:

  • Childhood vaccination programs

  • Emergency preparedness

  • Future pandemic response

  • Faith in medical institutions overall

Ironically, the suppression meant to “protect confidence” destroyed it.

8. What Should Have Happened Instead

A non-corrupt response would have included:

  • Transparent release of trial and safety data

  • Age-stratified and risk-based recommendations

  • Protection—not punishment—of scientific dissent

  • Honest acknowledgment of uncertainty

  • Clear separation between regulators and industry

None of that required perfect foresight.
It required humility.

Conclusion: Not Genocide — But Something Almost as Dangerous

So, were the COVID vaccines genocide?

No—not by legal definition or proven intent.

But were they part of an unprecedented episode of medical corruption at industrial scale?

Yes.

When profit-driven institutions override transparency, suppress debate, and evade accountability—millions can be harmed without anyone ever saying “kill.”

History does not judge systems by their press releases.
It judges them by outcomes—and by whether lessons were learned.

If this moment is memory-holed instead of examined, the next crisis will not be safer.

It will simply be quieter—until it isn’t.

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