Dr. Jordan Vaughn, founder and CEO of MedHelp, founder of the Microvascular Research Foundation and co-founder of the Concerned Doctors organization, will testify to the U.S. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations next week.

Vaughn, who has treated COVID-19 vaccine injury patients, will discuss issues he has witnessed and his experience with the Biden administration's response to concerns.

"It exposes what we already knew and that exposure has been coming in droves over the last year," Vaughn told 1819 News.

Numerous studies showing a link between the COVID-19 vaccines have raised questions about government transparency and trust. That's why the hearing is entitled "The Corruption of Science and Federal Health Agencies: How health officials downplayed and hid myocarditis and other adverse events associated with the COVID-19 vaccines.

"Even though they acted like the measures that were taken were founded on science, where actually there was no science at all," said Vaughn. "Even to the point that the vaccine itself, even though they said it was safe and effective and that it was the way out of this, they actually knew the whole time that it was neither."

Subcommittee chairman U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) is requesting details on communications between government agencies, such as the CDC and the FDA, along with vaccine manufacturers Pfizer and Moderna. He downplayed the risks in Spring 2021.

Vaughn believes they downplayed the risks because they didn't want a public health alert to spur more reports of vaccine injuries.

"This is more importantly about the fact that the very organizations that their job is to alert the public when there's a signal and to hold industry accountable and to make sure products are safe, were resistant to do that and also was communicating with that very industry to try to not have a health alert happen so it wouldn't create more reports of the issue," said Vaughn.

President Donald Trump's administration is taking a different approach. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. plans to stop vaccine recommendations for pregnant women, children and teens.

Vaughn is hopeful there will be a call to suspend the recommendation overall, as many European countries have done.

"We need to be honest about this and not have a propaganda mantra, a mantra that just says safe and effective," he added.

Vaughn said most vaccine injuries he sees occur within six months to a year after the vaccine. He said the boosters were more damaging because there was less information about them, and they have been found to cause immune system disruptions.

The hearing in Washington will be May 21, at 1 p.m.

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