by Michael Nevradakis, Ph.D. joined "The Defender In-Depth" to discuss the findings of his peer-reviewed paper and how a major scientific journal later retracted it.
He also discussed the general issue of censorship in the scientific publishing industry.
Mead, an epidemiologist, public health research scientist and lead author of "COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines - Lessons Learned from the Registrational Trials and Global Vaccination Campaign" said the journal Cureus had been "very brave" in publishing papers that were critical of COVID-19 vaccines.
So he believed Cureus "would be more open-minded" than other journals that had rejected his paper.
Cureus did indeed publish the paper - which was read more than 370,000 times in the month after it was posted. That's compared to most Cureus articles, which on average garner only about 2,700 views per year.
But last month, Cureus retracted the paper - an unusual move, as papers are rarely retracted after peer review and subsequent publication.
Mead joined "The Defender In-Depth" this week to discuss the paper's findings, the peer-review process the paper underwent, the subsequent retraction, the dominance of Springer Nature - publisher of Cureus - in the scientific publishing industry, and issues regarding censorship and financial interests plaguing scientific publishing.
'The Biggest Case of Public Health Malpractice we've ever seen'
Mead's paper analyzed COVID-19 mRNA vaccine trial data and post-injection injuries, detailed the vaccines' potential serious harms to humans, the mechanisms behind adverse events, the immunological reasons for vaccine inefficacy and the mortality data from the clinical trials.
It also called for a global moratorium on the vaccines.
According to Mead, the "lessons learned" from the research presented in the paper were that,
As a result, claims that the vaccines are,
Retraction 'expected' as paper was 'an indictment of the industry'
Mead said that he and his co-authors were careful with the accuracy of the paper they submitted, noting that in scientific, medical and academic publishing,
According to Mead, Cureus' editors initially appeared enthusiastic about the paper.
A "laborious process" of peer review followed, involving "multiple resubmissions" and "at least 200 comments" from reviewers, he said.
Even after Cureus published the paper, Mead said he remained skeptical.
Mead said that while the public response to the published paper was overwhelmingly positive,
The editors' enthusiasm also waned, Mead said.
While they initially provided positive feedback post-publication, this soon changed - especially after Mead pointed out comments posted on Cureus that,
The retraction,
Such retractions benefit,
According to Mead, such retractions were uncommon before the COVID-19 'pandemic', but are now "happening more often," especially concerning COVID-19 vaccines and other "lightning rod" issues,
Springer published infamous 'Proximal Origin' paper
Mead said Springer Nature is one of the "giants" in medical and scientific publishing.
Other journals, publications and scientific databases under the Springer umbrella include,
Nature Medicine, a Springer journal, published the "Proximal Origin" paper in March 2020, which attempted to discredit the "lab-leak" theory of the origin of COVID-19.
Government officials and media widely cited the paper, which has not been retracted.
According to The Financial Times, Springer paid 776 million Euros ($846.2 million) in dividends to investors over the past four years.
Reuters reported last month that BC Partners, a private equity firm backing Springer Nature, is mulling plans to publicly list Springer Nature, at an initial valuation of $9.7 billion.
Springer also broadened its holdings in news publishing.
Aside from its ownership of German newspapers Bild and Die Welt, Springer purchased Politico - known for its pro-vaccine and pro-lockdown narratives - in 2021 for more than $1 billion.
According to Mead, such concentration and capture,
Mead also warned that technological developments such as artificial intelligence (AI) may lead to more scientific censorship, in light of a recent Politico report that Springer and OpenAI have launched a global partnership, through which,
Speaking at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in January, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman expressed a vision through which AI would be trained to locate and deliver information from certain preferred sources.
He said:
Mead announced plans to develop,
Mead, who said he will seek to republish the retracted paper, called the effects of these retractions,
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