How the Medical Establishment Suppresses the Truth

Dr Vernon Coleman MB ChB DSc FRSA





Back in 2006, I wrote a book in which I listed the twelve medical truths we all need to know in order to survive. I called them `Coleman’s Laws’ and the 8th law in the list seems particularly appropriate today since governments have taken advantage of a health issue to make decisions which have altered our lives in every conceivable way, and in ways which will affect the lives of generations to come.

Coleman’s 8th law is this:

`The medical establishment will always take decisions on health matters which benefit industry, government and the medical profession, rather than patients. And the government will always take decisions on health matters which benefit the State rather than individual patients. What you read, hear or see about medicine and health matters will have more to do with the requirements of the pharmaceutical industry and the government, than the genuine needs of patients.’

That has never been truer than it is today. Your chances of getting the best treatment for your condition now depend not upon your needs, but upon a system which has been deranged, distorted and discombobulated by a politically inspired obsession with a disease which doctors now know is no more deadly than the flu.

And yet the government and the medical establishment has lied, lied and lied again.

They misled the public about the risk, they introduced house arrest and social distancing which they knew were unnecessary because the danger of the bug had been downgraded, they lied about the number of deaths caused by the disease, they did very little testing so that no one could see that the virus wasn’t anywhere near as dangerous as they said it was and they stopped doing post mortems on those who had died.

Because all our health resources have been misdirected, people with suspected cancer have to wait months for essential investigations and months for treatment.

There is something uncivilised and inhuman about a health system in which patients with suspected cancer must wait and wait to be diagnosed and then wait and wait to be treated — hoping that they won’t die on one of the waiting lists. There are now well over two million people waiting for investigations and treatment for cancer and within a few months there will be over ten million people on hospital waiting lists. In any State run health service financial resources must be finite: not everyone can get everything they want. But the way patients are chosen for treatment is appallingly cruel and quite indefensible.

And yet people have been standing on their doorsteps clapping the NHS and NHS staff have been bowing their heads modestly, lapping up the appreciation and the applause as though they deserved it.

And many of the medical staff probably believe that they deserve the plaudits because they haven’t been told the truth.

This is not a new problem.

A while ago I was invited to speak at a conference in London. The conference was, I was told, intended to tackle the subject of medication errors and adverse reactions to prescribed drugs.

Goody, I thought.

Iatrogenesis (doctor-induced disease) is something of a speciality of mine. I have written numerous books and articles on the subject and my books questioning medical procedures have sold millions of copies around the world. My campaigns have resulted in more drugs being banned or controlled than anyone else’s and as a result I have probably been lied about more than anyone else.

In addition to my speaking at the conference the organisers wanted me to help them decide on the final programme. I thought the conference was an important one and would give me a good opportunity to tell NHS staff the truth. I signed a contract as a consultant and a speaker for the conference.

Here is part of the blurb promoting the conference:

‘Against a background of increasing media coverage into the number of UK patients who are either becoming ill or dying due to adverse reactions to medication our conference aims to explain the current strategies to avoid Adverse Drug reactions and what can be done to educate patients.’

Putting the blame on patients for problems caused by prescription drugs is brilliant. Most drug related problems are caused by the stupidity of doctors not the ignorance of patients. If the aim is to educate patients on how best to avoid prescription drug problems the advice would be simple: ‘Don’t trust doctors.’

The promotion for the conference claims that ‘It is estimated errors in medication...account for 4% of hospital bed capacity.’ And that prescription drug problems ‘reportedly kill up to 10,000 people a year in the UK’. As I would have shown (had I not been banned from the conference) these figures are absurdly low.

But when a programme for the event appeared my name was not on the list of speakers. I was banned.

The list of speakers included one representing The Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry and another representing the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency.

Delegates representing the NHS were expected to pay £250 plus VAT (£293.75) to attend the event. The fees to be paid by the NHS, of course.

So why was I banned from this conference?

The organisers said that I was too controversial to speak.

Why might that be?

The drug industry.

Is the drug industry now deciding whom they will allow to speak to doctors and NHS staff on the problems caused by prescription drugs? Do NHS bosses know that people attending such conferences will only hear speakers approved by the drug industry and that speakers telling the truth will be banned?

The scary bottom line is that the NHS paid a lot of money to send delegates to a conference where someone representing the drug industry spoke to them on drug safety. But I was banned. The truth was uninvited.

Doctors exist only for two reasons: to look after people who have acquired a disease, and to prevent healthy people from falling ill. That’s it. The rest is unimportant.

But today’s medical profession has been bribed by drug companies, bullied by, and overwhelmed by bureaucrats and social workers, and forced by politicians to abandon most of their ethical principles (including, for example, the traditional principle of confidentiality). Through the weakness of their leaders, doctors have been turned into ethically impoverished mercenaries. Principles should be indigestible but the modern medical profession has swallowed its principles without hesitation or regret.

It is, perhaps, hardly surprising that most doctors now hate their jobs and regard them as little more than a way of making money. Many doctors would prefer to do something else for a living — if they could find something as lucrative. Vocation has been abandoned and replaced by expediency.

Medicine used to be a proud and independent profession. Sadly, much of the modern medical profession is now little more than a marketing arm for the pharmaceutical industry and a snitch service for the government. And things are likely to get worse rather than better.

The power of the government and of large corporations is these days so great that you cannot believe anything you see, hear or read on medical matters which is published or broadcast by a mainstream publisher or broadcaster.

I wrote that in 2006 but it is truer now than it was then. Today the main stream media has been bought lock stock and printing press.

To look after your health properly — and to reduce your chances of needing a doctor — you need access to information which you know you can trust.

But that’s not easy.

Much of the medical information in magazines or newspapers and on network television and radio has been reprinted directly from press releases produced by drug companies, or written by journalists who know far less about health care than you do. Very few publications, radio stations or television stations have on their staff anyone capable of interpreting a clinical trial properly or of reading a scientific paper and spotting the holes in it. And the so-called experts they consult are frequently paid not by the media but by drug companies. The mainstream media is dominated by government and drug company spokesmen and women. On radio and television the spokesman you hear advocating vaccines or some new wonder drug will probably be receiving payments from drug companies. Even books published by mainstream publishers are suspect, with some published with the aid of advance orders from drug companies or the meat industry. There are even doctors who are paid to write letters to newspapers promoting or defending certain foodstuffs or drug therapies.

I’m afraid that the world of medicine has been corrupt for years.

The coronavirus hoax, which has now become the coronavirus scandal, has merely exacerbated the problem.

I now have no doubt that the coronavirus scandal was created for specific reasons and that the pharmaceutical industry was involved in those reasons.

Health care systems around the world have been taken over by an absurd obsession with a disease which is no more dangerous than the flu. Nothing could possibly have been as incompetently managed as the response to this infection.

Millions of doctors and nurses have been convinced that we are fighting a war against a killer infection. More and more of them are now feeling ashamed and embarrassed at what has happened.

The people who stood on their doorsteps and clapped believed that they were applauding real heroism because, as I showed in my video on brainwashing, that was what the authorities wanted them to think. People have been raising money for NHS staff – unaware that many admit that they are working less than they have ever worked.

Everyone was told that NHS staff were risking their lives and every NHS employee who fell ill or died was given massive publicity. It was part of the brainwashing exercise. The NHS employs well over a million people. It is inevitable that some should die every day of the week. And every year many die of the flu. It’s tragic. But those lives were used by the government as part of their brainwashing exercise.

The scam should not have been a surprise. Our government has conned us all.

As I said a few minutes ago, we just have to remember Coleman’s 8th law of medicine:

`The medical establishment will always take decisions on health matters which benefit industry, government and the medical profession, rather than patients. And the government will always take decisions on health matters which benefit the State rather than individual patients. What you read, hear or see about medicine and health matters will have more to do with the requirements of the pharmaceutical industry and the government, than the genuine needs of patients.’

I wrote that in 2006 but it’s just as accurate today as it was then.

Copyright Vernon Coleman June 2020

Abridged and adapted from a chapter in `Coleman’s Law’ by Vernon Coleman – available on Amazon as a paperback and an eBook.

Vernon Coleman’s book `Doctors Kill More Patients Than Cancer’ (an analysis of health care in the UK) is also available as a paperback and an eBook.





Home