Robert Malone on covid: what the evidence says · JRE #1757
SUBJECT: COVID
Not a true/false call. Every claim is logged with its sources; read the exhibits below.
He's put together a great little video clip in which he clearly documents the conspiracy between Janet Woodcock and Rick Bright to make it so that physicians could not administer hydroxychloroquine outside of the hospital.
What the evidence says 01 / RECORD
The FDA issued an emergency use authorization (EUA) for chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine on March 28, 2020 at the request of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), and revoked it on June 15, 2020. The FDA's public revocation announcement states the decision followed a rigorous assessment by scientists in the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research and cites two grounds: emerging data showing the drugs were unlikely to be effective against COVID-19, including a large randomized trial showing no mortality or recovery benefit in hospitalized patients, and ongoing reports of serious cardiac adverse events, concluding known and potential risks outweighed known and potential benefits. BARDA itself, in consultation with the FDA, sent the letter formally requesting the revocation. No FDA document, court record, or investigative report corroborates a coordinated conspiracy between Janet Woodcock and Rick Bright to restrict hydroxychloroquine to in-hospital use; Rick Bright's own May 2020 whistleblower complaint centered on a different dispute, alleging he was pressured by HHS officials to expand emergency access to hydroxychloroquine against his scientific objections, the opposite of the restriction Malone describes. No independent, allowlisted source corroborating the specific 'documented conspiracy' video was found. The claim is unsupported by the public record and contradicted by the FDA's own stated rationale for the EUA revocation.