The Hunting for a Cure Scam and How It’s Done

You could put the name of any disease as the first word of your appeal for funds (free donations of money); no donation is too small. Monthly donations are encouraged. So, to set up your scam and make up a name for your diseases, for example, you might decide to use the word “autism” because the criminal vaccination of defenseless babies with an adult-sized dosage is causing a record amount of that disease, that now affects 1 in 36 children when it used to affect 1 in 100 before the intense vaccination effort on little babies.

The search for a cure for diseases

Note that autism is a commonly occurring genetic variation that has been around as long as humans have inhabited the Earth but has seen an incredible rate of growth from 1 in 100 to 1 in 36 over the last 20 years. 98% of children impacted by autism exhibit a mutation in the MTHFR gene, which impedes the body’s capacity to convert folate into methylfolate effectively. Consequently, individuals with this gene alteration may face an elevated risk of having insufficient levels of vital antioxidants such as Glutathione and Cysteine.

Lots of people are concerned about the huge increase in the supposed naturally occurring problem the authorities have named autism, so you decide autism may be a financial opportunity.

You next contact the attorney you keep on retainer to help with your scams. The two of you talk it over and decide to form an autism foundation.

Next is to advertise your newly invented foundation nationally in magazines so the people who are concerned about autism are most likely to read it, stating how badly the foundation needs funds to keep “searching for the cure” of the dreaded disease “autism” which now affects far more helpless little children.

The government gets in on the deal by offering your tax money in the form of grants to the researchers and their 501(c)(3) non-profits to help fund the research. The government’s regulatory leniency towards Big Pharma allows them to profit from these made-up diseases.

Due to inadequate scrutiny, these non-profit organizations frequently enjoy lenient oversight, enabling them to allocate funds to research endeavors that may lack the necessary scientific rigor. The absence of accountability raises concerns regarding these organizations’ true motives. It raises questions about whether their actions genuinely prioritize public welfare or are primarily motivated by the financial gain from the generous donations they collect.

The whole scam is really just a play on words. In popular usage of our language, you take what they say to mean; they are trying to figure out a way to rid the world of a disease called autism. In actual grammar, it means something else entirely.

What they mean by using grammar is that they are trying to cure the autism and not the children who have autism.

It is entirely impossible to cure something that is not sick (the autism), so they can go for years running the scam and living well off your heartfelt donations.

The heartless perpetrators of these schemes don’t feel any remorse for picking a disease and milking it for all they can get. They could care less that you don’t really understand grammar and think they are trying to help.

Since the autism itself is not sick, they can go on hunting for a cure for years and never find a cure, just like they’ve been doing with cancer for almost a century. The action of curing is only effectively conducted by morticians and taxidermists.

By the way, the word attorney comes from the ancient Greek language and means to “twist” and in this case, it is words that are twisted to say one thing and mean another thing entirely.

That reminds me of an attorney joke I heard years ago that may be appropriate,
“Do you know why they bury dead attorneys 12 feet deep instead of the normal 6 feet deep? Because deep down, they aren’t that bad.”

 

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