by Ethan A. Huff
April 26, 2015
from
NaturalNews Website
At the behest of the World 'Health'
Organization (WHO), the so-called "SAGE
- Strategic Advisory Group of Experts - Working Group on Vaccine
Hesitancy" has put together a report for the United Nations arm
outlining new strategies to convince more people to get vaccinated.
And in this report, recommendations are
made that the vaccine industry market its vaccines in the same way
that fast food corporations market junk food products to children -
by appealing to emotion, telling fairy tales and ultimately
deceiving consumers.
No matter how much propaganda the vaccine-pushers force into the
mainstream media these days, a large segment of the public simply
isn't buying it.
And this fact has prompted WHO to hire
various teams of marketing consultants to come up with new ways to
essentially trick people into getting jabbed, a laborious process
that led WHO straight to the world's most disingenuous marketing
gurus - junk food companies!
According to
VaccineFactCheck.org, WHO decided
that the beset way to sell more vaccines is to enlist the marketing
advice of the International Food and Beverage Alliance (IFBA),
whose 11 members
include The Coca-Cola Company, PepsiCo,
Nestle, Unilever, General Mills and
McDonald's.
Each of these multinational corporations
admits to using calculating methods to sway customers to buy their
unhealthy products, not the least of which includes
appealing to people's emotions rather than providing truthful
facts.
Happy Meals, cigarettes,
alcohol and now vaccines
How the
marketing of poisons has evolved over the years
In the SAGE report, the working group
explains how it,
"explored private-sector approaches
to shaping behavior, as well as strategies used by other
organizations to change behavior."
In other words, WHO's goal through SAGE
was to develop a foolproof marketing approach that would have the
biggest impact in convincing
people who question or oppose vaccines to change their
minds, regardless of the facts.
Among the group's recommendations are various marketing tactics that
have been employed by the likes of cigarette manufacturers, alcohol
distributors, fast food chains and other toxic industries over the
years to make poisons seem appealing. One of these tactics is to
avoid any mention of facts or truth, and instead focus on
messages that suggest benefits for a product, whether real or
imagined.
Take a look at this hilarious 1931 ad for "germ-proof" Camel
cigarettes being recommended by a fictitious ear, nose and throat
doctor.
The header reads, "Give your throat a
vacation...," with the following line referencing "fresh"
cigarettes, the implication being that smoking Camels will help you
breathe better:
DigitalPosterCollection.com
Or how about this ridiculous ad for
"vitamin donuts," which shows smiley, rosy-cheeked children
chewing
down on refined flour rounds "fortified with a minimum of 25 units
of Vitamin B1":
MyFitStation.com
The absurdity of both of these ads, the
latter of which suggests that children who eat donuts will somehow
gain "pep and vigor" (which is an obvious lie), illustrates what the
SAGE Working Group means when it says on page 48 of its report that
vaccine manufacturers need to adopt the philosophy that,
"Consumers
care about benefits, not supporting facts."
Read it for yourself on
'WHO
- Report of the SAGE Working Group on Vaccine Hesitancy.'
This tactic has repeatedly been used by
companies like McDonald's to push Happy Meals, by alcohol companies
to push hard liquor, by cigarette manufacturers to push "cancer
sticks" and soon by
vaccine
corporations to push chemical-laden poison jabs.
People are dumb,
suggests WHO, so win them over to vaccines through emotion rather
than facts
Some of the other deceptive
recommendations in the SAGE report include the following:
-
Focus on "the power of the
story" - make up myths about children dying from polio or
something and warn parents that if they don't vaccinate
their children, they could be next!
-
Appeal to people's emotions
rather than reason. When reason is involved, people reach
conclusions, which in the case of vaccines will more than
likely be that vaccines are highly risky and dangerous.
Emotions, on the other hand, lead to action - or as the
report puts it, "change comes from feelings, not facts."
-
Use social media to "win the
hearts, minds, and now, voice" of the public. In other
words, infiltrate people's "friends" and "followers" groups
to promote vaccines as a safe and effective way to prevent
disease, even though this is a lie.
-
Hide the connection between
private industry and pro-vaccine propaganda - convince
parents that those pushing vaccines are independent and on
their side rather than just trying to make huge profits, or
worse, trying to kill their children!
-
Identify subject matter that
people can relate to or that they want to talk about and tie
it in with pro-vaccine agenda - Do you like cars? Your
favorite brand says vaccines are awesome!
-
If you have to, present what
appear to be facts (but that aren't actually true) alongside
your emotional appeal to seal the deal and win another
vaccine convert.
-
Focus on just one or two "big
ideas" to encourage "dialogue back and forth in the context
of social media" - once again, infiltrate people's social
circles online and repeat, over and over again, that
vaccines are safe and effective, vaccines are safe and
effective, vaccines are safe and effective.
-
Push pro-vaccination "social
norms" - all the cool people are getting vaccines, and so
should you!
-
Push school-based programs to
indoctrinate children into believing vaccines are good for
them.
And on and on the list goes, beginning on page 48 of the SAGE report
VaccineFactCheck.org
The biggest takeaway here is that
the mother ship of the vaccine agenda,
the United Nations (through
WHO), is openly admitting that pro-vaccine science is a myth, and
that it doesn't exist.
If vaccines really were safe and
effective, and the science truly backed this, then WHO wouldn't need
a marketing strategy in the first place.
But because vaccines don't actually work and aren't safe, WHO's
vaccine division is resorting to the same fraudulent marketing
tactics that companies like
McDonald's use to promote Happy
Meals and Big Macs - make the product look as good as possible and
manipulate people into buying it by appealing to everything other
than reason and common sense.
Sources
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