American Fortune Life
Chapter 1796 I Do Not Deny More Benefits!
A basic common sense, explicitly recognized by Western medicine, is that there is no cure for a virus-induced cold.
So, if that's the case, how do you specify a drug to treat a viral cold?
Perhaps for a simple reason, it was 2005, when the Pentagon ordered all United States military personnel to be vaccinated against avian influenza. Secretary of Defense Rams then announced that he would set aside a $1 billion budget for the Ministry of Defense to purchase and store medicines and vaccines, including Duffy.
The President then called Congress to allocate another $2 billion to buy vaccines. Behind this, however, former U.S. Defense Secretary Rams was the chairman of the board of directors of a California-based pharmaceutical company that happened to have a global monopoly on avian influenza vaccines.
The company sold the right to sell drugs to the Swiss pharmaceutical giant Rocky. He himself remained the largest shareholder in the pharmaceutical company after becoming Minister of Defence, to whom the right to the proceeds from the sale of medicines belonged. This led to a sevenfold increase in the share price of the pharmaceutical company, adding millions of dollars to the income of the former head of defense.
Through the financial crisis, Andy learned that the most powerful weapon was panic. And now the panic caused by swine flu, light and ineffective, heavy and troublesome, now this, just right.
And creating panic is far from simply selling oversold drugs. Vaccination is the most alarming aspect of fraud. If the six-level alarm is eventually raised due to an outbreak, in reverse, drugs and vaccines that have not been tested throughout the entire process can be directly injected into use!
True, it is direct use. It is natural to know that when the real epidemic occurs, this is not the case, and the premise that the epidemic is serious does not exist. In that case, it would be dangerous to inject people with vaccines that pose a safety risk.
Of course, the world is so big, there are all kinds of voices, all of them, believe it or not, all in themselves!
Andy was too deeply involved in the interests of the matter to want to get a clear idea. He just had to make sure that the swine flu was harmless to himself. As for how much of this flu was hidden, he had no interest in it. Since he stood at the top of the pyramid and saw the many truths of the world, he knew a lot of things. The international struggle and everything was real and objective. See if the problem had to have a world xing perspective. When looking at any major event, look who was behind it, whose interests it was, who was harmed, and whether or not he could benefit from it.
I can't help it. Who makes him Andy Smith one of the top vested interests in the world!
According to the results of the think tank analysis, if WHO decides to declare an epidemiological emergency, the biggest result would be to sponsor the profits of those pharmaceutical giants on a scale of 10 billion euros!
So there's a phenomenon, the American stock market, the pharmaceutical industry skyrocketing, the European stock market, the swine flu pharmaceutical sector skyrocketing, the Heavenly Dynasty stock market, every day billions of injections into the pharmaceutical sector, 25 pharmaceutical stocks skyrocketing, the global stock market, the pharmaceutical industry stock price skyrocketing.
Andy, who had long been in the pharmaceutical sector, naturally earned a pot full of money, although not the biggest winner, but also a vested interest in it, so his media did not question or reveal the so-called truth, because this NAI cheese was too big to be used against the entire pharmaceutical industry, even if it were to be re-appointed.
$130 million!
This is what the think tank has earned so far from the stock of a global pharmaceutical company, which is really not much more than his assets, but it's just the beginning, and as the events ferment, the stock price will rise and the profits will be even greater.
Of course, even if we make another 200 million, 300 million, that's just a few more numbers for Andy right now. But Andy likes to win, he likes to keep winning, he doesn't want to fail.
Because the path of the deal is undefeated and the enemy can be defeated. Fifty percent of a million dollars in losses is half a million, and half a million to a million dollars in value added is 100 percent profitable. The success of each one, though, will only take him a small step. But every time he fails, he takes a big step backwards. From the first floor of the Empire State Building to the top floor, it takes an hour. But jumping off the roof, in 30 seconds, you can go back to the bottom of the building.
No way, this is an unstoppable step forward with time, the sense of urgency that his plug-in strengths are disappearing and time dictates everything. Life is not just a race for strategy, but, to some extent, a race for time and life. Fifteen years ago, even at a constant profit of only 5% a year, the total increase in wealth was laughable enough.
“Sneeze...”
Andy clicked his mouse and closed the video window, ending the meeting, sneezing suddenly, frowning and rubbing his nose, and vomiting: “Who's talking about me behind my back? ”
Wearing a blue T-shirt, white overalls, a pink bow on her head, a beautiful face moisturizing red YAN. Sister Ziling, like a teenager, is sitting there reading a novel by Andy, hearing Andy sneeze, and mumbling. She can't help but smile and put the book down. She stood up and walked to the full open landing door, pulling the landing door, and whispering gently: “Oh, sometimes it really feels like you're from heaven. Even this infarction, you know, just close the landing door. The mountain wind is still a little cold right now... ”
“Mountain wind? I still feel like someone's counting me behind...” Andy frowned and shook his head in exchange for Sister Ziling's helpless smile.
And Andy's casual vomiting really masked him, and right now, there's really someone, no, there's a group of people talking about him.
The capital of Massachusetts and the largest city, Boston, once known by the United States as the "center of the universe".
“ We hope that this prestigious newspaper will be maintained, but if the Boston Globe union continues to refuse to cut spending options, the old American newspaper will have to stop publishing! ”
In the conference room of the Boston Globe headquarters building, Arthur Suzberg, president of the New York Times, said with a touch of anger and helplessness in his eyes, he didn't care at all because of the horror of the editors and executives of the Boston Globe in the conference room after he said that.
The New York Times invested $1.1 billion in 1993 to acquire The Boston Globe. But with the aggravation of the American press dilemma. The 137-year-old newspaper lost $50 million last year and this year's loss momentum has not diminished, with a projected loss of $85 million.
Daily releases of The Boston Globe have fallen by 11 per cent as a result of increased online access to news and cuts in spending by marketers during the downturn. Combined with the strained financial position of the parent company, The New York Times, which had intended to continue its downsizing and spending cuts to overcome the crisis, 13 unions affiliated with the newspaper had firmly refused to yield $20 million in profits, leaving the company with no choice but to make a decision to close the newspaper.
The decision, however, angered Boston Globe employees, trade union representatives and some folk over the “threat” of the New York Times, as demonstrations were taking place in front of the newspaper headquarters building in Boston.
However, these demonstrations do not change anything, the interests have always been the only thing that entrepreneurs value, and as for the employees who are now looking for these corporate bosses, unions, etc., when newspapers are shut down, they are just a bunch of unemployed poor bastards.
“Let's continue to talk to the unions, cut costs and make them understand that the Boston Globe is inevitable because of the current economic environment, the newspapers are closed, and nobody wants to see it.” The editor-in-chief of The Boston Globe hastily said that he really didn't want to see the newspaper shut down.
“Redundancy, cost-cutting measures, we can talk again and trade union organizations will make compromises, selling the Boston Globe now is hard to find buyers, and closing costs is really too high.” Boston Globe's CEO actively persuaded him not to want the 137-year-old newspaper to close in his hands.
The cost of closing down was even higher, touching the nerves of New York Times Chairman Arthur Souzberg, and in the current economic situation, the New York Times was having a rough time, reporting a loss of $1.1 billion at the end of 2008. In order to maintain it, the company also had to sell 21 floors of the Manhattan headquarters building in New York, raising $225 million to ease the financial strain.
Wait...
With a glimmer of light, he had to look around the crowd for a week and say, “Perhaps it's not hard to find a buyer. ”
As soon as he said this, everyone's eyes focused on his face, and he said faintly: "Andy Smith, the richest man in our new world, may be very interested! ”