Do Mask Mandates Violate 15 U.S.C. § 41 (Or is it Just the Vaccines?) - Granite Grok

Do Mask Mandates Violate 15 U.S.C. § 41 (Or is it Just the Vaccines?)

Dr David Martin

This is making the rounds from Dr. David Martin. He was the featured expert in Plandemic II. Dr. Martin, an expert, has exposed all sorts of COVID-related BS. This time he’s simply citing existing Federal laws that your State and Local Government are breaking.


Related: As Chicken-Chris Prepares to Renew NH’s Mask Mandate, More Proof They Do Not Do What He Claims


It is unlawful under the FTC Act, 15 U.S.C. § 41 et seq., to advertise that a product or service can prevent, treat, or cure human disease unless you possess competent and reliable scientific evidence, including, when appropriate, well-controlled human clinical studies, substantiating that the claims are true at the time they are made.

We’ve shared the pics from the sides of some mask manufacturer packaging that tell you these things don’t do any of the things the politicians attribute to them. An act that, in my humble reading, advertising that a product can prevent human disease or at least its transmission.

That might be a stretch, but it sounds more plausible than the idea that face coverings do anything they claim in this context. There are no well-controlled clinical studies to support that they do, and numerous studies spanning decades that say they do not.

Maybe a lawyer will look into it and get back to us.

In the meantime, here’s Dr. Martin to talk about that bit of law as regards other matters like the vaccine they are promoting, which he notes,

“The Moderna and Pfizer “alleged vaccine” trials have explicitly acknowledged that their gene therapy technology has no impact on viral infection or transmission whatsoever and merely conveys to the recipient the capacity to produce an S1 spike protein endogenously by the introduction of a synthetic mRNA sequence. Therefore, the basis for the Massachusetts statute and the Supreme Court’s determination is moot in this case.”

 

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