Today:
Lauterbach backs down after interview - and refers to "technical" error
In an interview, Karl Lauterbach had claimed that multiple Corona infections often result in "incurable immune deficiency." Now the health minister is
backpedaling. He suggests that the statement was inadvertently included in the interview.
Federal Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD) has retracted an interview statement about the consequences of corona diseases and explained the slip-up
with a "technical transmission error". In an interview with the "Rheinische Post" published on Saturday, Lauterbach had spoken of an "immune
deficiency that can no longer be cured" that often occurs in people who have survived several corona infections. He referred to studies, although he
added that the findings were "not yet certain." Numerous media outlets picked up on the statement.
Science journalist Christina Berndt of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung" criticized the statement. Lauterbach was discussing data that had not been published
in scientific journals or in a so-called preprint, Berndt wrote in an opinion piece. The findings are immature, he said, and their authors want to do
more research. One should be "very careful" with the interpretation of such data.
Lauterbach responded to the journalist's article via Twitter - suggesting that the statement had accidentally ended up in the interview. There had
been a "technical transmission error" at the Ministry of Health, he wrote. "The quote was: 'Studies now show very clearly that those affected are
often dealing with an immune deficiency, the duration of which we do not yet know.' There can be no question of incurable immunodeficiency at this
time."
The minister did not explain how exactly the quote was supposed to have got into the interview. If a newspaper conducts an interview with a
politician, it is usually authorized. This means that the politician or his staff may read the interview before publication and change the wording.
The interview with Lauterbach was apparently also released in this way. According to journalist Jan Drebes of the "Rheinische Post," the editorial
team received an authorized version that contained the sentence in question. However, it is possible that this happened "due to an internal error" in
the Ministry of Health, Drebes wrote on Twitter. To call Lauterbach "a liar because of that, I don't think is appropriate," he added.
Link (German)
I don´t know if it´s "only" a simple mental illness he suffers from or if it is the training he got in "Haaavaaad" (Harvard in
Klabauterbach-emglish). That Harvard thing is really evil, every evil seems to come from that university. Klaus Schwab was also a Harvard graduate.
That seems to be the place where the "elites" recruit their soldiers for their evil plans.