Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson Demands DoD Contractor Come Clean Regarding "Technical Glitch" Affecting DoD Medical Epidemiology Database
On Monday 7 March, Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson issued a letter to Department of Defense contractor Unissant, Inc., regarding its management of the DoD Medical Epidemiology Database (DMED).
This database was the subject of allegations leveled by three military physicians: Lieutenant Colonel Theresa Long, Lt. Col. Peter Chambers, and Dr. Samuel Sigoloff. The allegations were first made public at a roundtable discussion sponsored by Sen. Johnson: “COVID-19: A Second Opinion” held on Monday 24 January.
These allegations are potentially explosive. The three physicians claimed the rate of serious adverse events among military personnel skyrocketed after the introduction of the COVID-19 vaccine, in comparison to the years 2016-2020. These serious adverse events included:
• A 302% increase in tachycardia
• A 369% increase in testicular cancer
• A 437% increase in ovarian dysfunction
• A 452% increase in migraines
• A 468% increase in pulmonary embolism
• A 472% increase in female infertility
• A 474% increase in neoplasms of the thyroid and other endocrine glands
• A 487% increase in demyelinating
• A 487% increase in breast cancer
• A 551% increase in Guillain-Barre syndrome
• A 624% increase in cancers of the digestive system
• A 680% increase in multiple sclerosis
• A 900% increase in esophageal cancer
• A 1048% increase in diseases of the nervous system
• And a whopping 2200% increase in hypertension
All of these serious adverse events have shown a strong signal in the CDC’s Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System after the COVID-19 vaccines were introduced.
Mr. Renz provided data downloaded by unnamed DoD whistleblowers from the DMED database personnel validating all this. Senator Johnson fired off a letter to the Department of Defense demanding an explanation.
On 1 February, the DoD contacted the website PolitiFact Check and confirmed all of Renz’s claims, but they attributed the apparent rise in serious adverse events to a “technical glitch” and took the DMED database offline while they took steps to “identify and correct the root-cause of their data corruption.” They subsequently released corrected figures which showed no increase in these serious adverse events in comparison to the years 2016-2020.
On 15 February, the DoD informed Sen. Johnson’s staff that they had created a full backup of the DMED. They have yet to describe the nature of the “technical glitch” said to be responsible for the apparent shocking rise in serious adverse events subsequent to the introduction of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Now, we could ask why the DoD contacted PolitiFact Check before responding to the query of a United States Senator, but never mind that for now. Here is the scenario the DoD is asking us to swallow:
• For the years 2016-2020, there was a shocking rise in serious adverse events among US military personnel, who are mostly young and healthy, and for which no explanation has even been offered
• The rise in serious adverse events affected only those that were to spike in the VAERS after the introduction of the COVID-19 vaccines
• No one at the DoD noticed this shocking rise in serious adverse events (“Hey, I’m seeing TWENTY TIMES as many patients with high blood pressure! WTF is going on?”)
• This glitch mysteriously corrected itself just in time for the COVID-19 vaccine rollout
Shamefully, this story has been completely ignored by the mainstream media.
A member of Sen. Johnson staff had emailed the company the previous week. A Unissant employee responded “We are not in a position nor are we willing to engage in this discussion.”
In his latest missive, Sen. Johnson demanded that Unissant:
· Explain the company’s contractual obligations to the DoD
· List all other instances of “data corruption” that have occurred in the database,
· Provide all documents and communications between Unissant and the DoD referring or relating to the DMED from 1 August 2021 to the present
· Preserve all records referring, relating, or reported to the Defense Medical Epidemiology Database.