How can anyone credibly claim that the Nuremberg rules no longer apply when a 97-year-old woman, Irmgard Furchner, was recently convicted for her role in the murders of thousands of people? She was only a secretary in one of the World War II concentration camps.
The essential principle of the Nuremberg rules: no one may be subjected to any medical procedure without being fully informed, consent without coercion. In the context of the recent phony plandemic, that rule includes informing intended recipients of the so-called “safe and effective vaccines” about their potential dangers. That rule also includes not threatening people with things like “take the shot or lose your job or be thrown out of the military.”
The common excuse, “I only did what I was told to do,” has never been taken seriously even though many doctors and medical institutions offer government directives and other commands as justification for ignoring the Hippocratic Oath (“do no wrong”). All should do what is right when dealing with other people. But the world is littered with people and institutions who organized and managed the phony plandemic and killed and maimed millions while getting rich. It’s long past time for them to be held to account.
My third novel, “Criminal Opera,” is about applying the Nuremberg punishments to those deserving people and organizations.
Autographed copies of my first three novels (see mcphetersbooks.com) are available in the areas of Prescott and Prescott Valley, Arizona, by calling the author at 203.588.9808.