It’s always easier to run a business if you can get in bed with multiple governments. From Max Jones at unlimitedhangout.com:
In the face of a potentially industry-ending slew of patent cliffs, Big Pharma has begun acquiring biotechnology companies to stave off collapse. To get these drugs to market, the industry is pursuing the only solution left for their dying model: a full takeover of the WHO to capture the global regulatory system.

Big Pharma must soon confront an industry-wide hazard that reaches magnitudes far greater than the typical concerns of corporate profit margins and business politics. Through years of industry consolidation, it has essentially made itself “too big to fail.” Only now, the model which it once could never fail within — that is, the practice of obtaining patent exclusivity over drugs that are approved through clinical trials and regulations — has become obsolete, even impossible, under the current conditions of the industry.
In this new climate, the trials and regulations Big Pharma once successfully navigated may very well lead to its total demise. However, the pharmaceutical sector has set its eyes on the only solution that can keep its money and power intact; the full takeover of the public sector, specifically the World Health Organization (WHO), and the regulatory system that now holds the entire market hostage.
The problem begins with the looming financial threat that the top 20 Big Pharma companies face: from now until 2030, $180 billion in sales will be at risk. This threat, called a patent cliff, is a regularly occurring problem for the pharmaceutical industry. Big Pharma has long made its money by attaining patent exclusivity of certain drugs, thereby monopolizing all potential profits made off of them for a finite amount of time. When that patent exclusivity ends, the drug rolls head first off of a “patent cliff,” and tens of billions of dollars in revenue are put at risk.
Typically, companies address patent cliffs through mergers and acquisitions (M&A) of other, often smaller drug companies that produce products with market potential. This time around, however, according to Biopharma Dive, “after years of industry consolidation, there are not many major large drugmakers left as attractive merger targets.” In other words, Big Pharma has become “too big to fail” and – over the next 6 years – faces a new round of potentially disastrous patent cliffs. Further, traditional chemical drugs already exist for many diseases and regulators have increased approval standards for them, delaying the time in which new products obtained from M&As can be taken to market.
Pingback: The WHO: Building a Permanent Pandemic Market, by Max Jones — Der Friedensstifter
Pandemics uber alles?
I thought the man made god AI was omnipotent?
Ask it how to stop the plandemics.
Oh…it must be the shekels.
One thing it [AI] doesn’t have is human nature?
We just might have something here that “could” be used for good.