Daniel Best: TrumpÕs
Vince Foster?
Hey, Donald, do you see anything fishy here?
Snopes.com, of all people, has a good
summary of the basic known facts in this very recent high-level suspicious
death case:
On 1 November 2018, the Trump
administrationÕs senior adviser on drug pricing reform, Daniel Best, was found
ÒunresponsiveÓ near the garage door exit of a Washington, D.C., apartment building. He was pronounced dead at the scene by
first responders.
A statement released the same day by
Health and Human Services Secretary (HHS) Alex Azar
mourned Best as a Òfriend and colleagueÓ but addressed
neither the circumstances nor the cause of his death. No other details were
released to the public.
Two weeks later, on 15 November, the
office of Washington, D.C.Õs chief medical examiner announced that Best had
died of Òmultiple blunt force injuries.Ó His death was ruled a suicide. No
other information was provided.
And no more information has been provided up to
the present time. That link behind
the word ÒfoundÓ takes one to the Cleveland.com web site, which doesnÕt tell us
much more, except that Best sounded very upbeat about what he hoped to
accomplish working in the Trump administration:
Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Seema
Verma described his death as "a loss to our
country and to all of us personally who had the great privilege of working with
Dan." Health insurance trade group CEO Matt Eyles
of AHIP called Best "a dedicated leader who
brought warmth, compassion and an unmistakable dedication to the American
people to his work every single day."
In a
September speech before a pharmacy industry group, Best discussed lowering
costs, making it easier for generics and biosimilar
drugs to enter the market and rethinking drug rebate programs that drive up
prices. "Today, in the
marketplace, everybody except the patient wins when price goes up," said Best.
Probably
the most telling thing about BestÕs violent death has been the almost total
news blackout about it. Maybe the
NOMA (national opinion molding apparatus) learned its lesson in the case of
Deputy White House Counsel Vincent W. Foster, Jr., during the early months of
the Clinton administration. Foster
might have been a crony and former law firm colleague of Hillary Clinton (and
maybe more), but he was a couple of levels down in the White House with no
clear job description. Daniel Best,
on the other hand, had a job that gave him a chance to do things that directly
touch almost everyone in the country.
ThereÕs really no reason why the press couldnÕt have given Foster the
Daniel Best treatment, which is to say, the technique no. 1 in the Seventeen
Techniques of Truth Suppression and
just dummied up. If itÕs not in the
news itÕs as if it never happened.
Try
searching ÒWashington Post Daniel
BestÓ and see what comes up. I
found nothing at all, amazing as that may seem. You can put BestÕs name after CBS, NBC,
ABC, CNN, NPR, Fox News and you get the same results, nothing. In the process of doing your search you
will probably discover that The Washington
Times, which hardly anyone reads,
reported his death right after it happened on November 1, but at that point
they were just saying that he had died and nothing more, and the Times seems to have been content to
leave it at that as far as its obligation to its readers is concerned. ItÕs as though that they had gotten the
word that they were out of line in even reporting the death and they have since
joined the others and have dummied up.
I
first learned of BestÕs death from an email correspondent who sent me the link
to the report on Cleveland.com. That was the later article that revealed
that Best had Òmultiple blunt forceÓ injuries and that the death had been ruled
a suicide. For some reason, Snopes never links to it, although it does give us those
essential, apparently contradictory, facts. The story sounded completely outrageous,
that the 49-year-old former CVSHealth and Pfizer
Pharmaceuticals executive with three children, a cheerful face and seemingly
everything to live for, had taken his own life in what appeared to be an
impossible manner. Since I had
never heard of Cleveland.com, my first thought was that this must be a fake
news site. But then I quickly
discovered that the Cleveland Plain
Dealer had a routine obituary with
a photograph showing that same happy looking open face in a different pose,
although it took them five days to post it after BestÕs death. It reminds us a bit of Gus Weiss, whose
curious ÒsuicideÓ at the Watergate in Washington, DC, was first belatedly
reported in his hometown newspaper of Nashville, Tennessee. See ÒConnected
Gulf War Opponent a ÔSuicideÕÓ and
ÒThree Important Assassinations?Ó
Only a
Snopes editor wouldnÕt be suspicious at this
point. Everyone should know by now
that it might as well be part of their job description to be credulous and call
skeptics names, no matter what the issue might be. One might as well have expected Pravda in the old Soviet days to
question the latest pronouncement from the Kremlin. To what should be no oneÕs surprise,
they seem to be quite satisfied with all the unanswered questions. Who, exactly, ruled the death a suicide
and upon what basis? We are left
with the impression that it was the Washington, DC, medical examinerÕs office
that made the suicide ruling, the same one that told us that he had all those
injuries that sound like those that one would most typically receive from a
beating, but surely that could not be the case. It isnÕt even the medical examinerÕs job
to determine whether a violent death was a homicide, a suicide, or an
accident. He lacks the resources to
make that determination. ThatÕs the
job of the police.
The
name of the responsible person for the suicide ruling and the basis for that
ruling are only the beginning of the questions that need to be answered
here. Did Best live at that
apartment building where he was found fatally injured? Who found him, and how did they happen
to find him? Are their security
cameras in the area? Were there any
other witnesses besides BestÕs discoverer(s)? Why has there been no public plea for
any witnesses to come forward? Was
there any possible motive for suicide?
Has anyone even talked to his wife or any other loved ones about his
death?
The Real Scandal
Of
course, these are the sorts of questions for which a proper free press would be
energetically seeking answers. As The Washington Post says, ÒDemocracy Dies in
Darkness.Ó But weÕre getting
nothing but silence from the press.
That is the really big scandal here, and that is the best indicator that
something truly foul is afoot.
The
claim that Snopes confidently—and ever so
predictably—pronounces as false it states thusly: ÒA medical examiner's
conclusion that Health and Human Services drug pricing adviser Daniel Best died
of multiple blunt force injuries contradicts the official ruling that he
committed suicide.Ó
ItÕs
pretty amusing to watch the contortions that Snopes
goes through to reach the ÒfalseÓ conclusion. They trot out experts to tell us that
one can sustain blunt force trauma, in theory, from any number of ways, from
having fallen from a height, from being struck by a vehicle, from being near an
explosion, etc. So did Best jump
from that apartment building or jump in front of a car or set off an explosion
near himself?
We donÕt have enough information to say, says Snopes,
so itÕs false to say that the little we have been told about the death is
inconsistent with the suicide conclusion.
As one
might expect, Snopes, in the process, also makes very
heavy use of no. 5 of the Seventeen
Techniques for Truth Suppression,
calling the skeptics names:
Internet
conspiracy theorists questioned that
ruling. Noting the pharmaceutical industryÕs objections to the very task Best
was hired to accomplish (i.e., lowering prescription drug costs), not to
mention President TrumpÕs announcement days
before BestÕs death of a plan to reduce Medicare drug prices and the fact that
Best died of blunt force injuries, the
theorists took to social media to float the idea that Best was the victim
of foul play and not suicide.
---
Far-right
conspiracist
websites followed suit. An 18 November article on
Neon Nettle suggested that the public was being asked to believe that Best had
beaten himself to death:
The Chief Medical ExaminerÕs verdict
raised questions among the health community, with many people refusing to
believe Best killed himself by repeatedly hitting himself with a blunt object
until he died.
Erin Elizabeth of HNN [Health Nut News]
described the ruling of BestÕs death as Òconfusing,Ó saying:
ÒHow does one kill themselves by hitting
themselves with a blunt object? Repeatedly?Ó
Another conspiracy-mongering website, Uncle SamÕs Misguided Children, posed the
same sarcastic question:
So did he lie down under a garage door
and let it hit him Òmultiple timesÓ or did he beat himself to death with a
baseball bat? How does that work? Add to the very few actual articles on his
death — this man was described as one of TrumpÕs ÒseniorÓ HHS officials
working with Alex Azar. Things that make you go hmm. (all bolding of
loaded language added)
But,
of course, they donÕt make the Snopes folks go
Òhmm.Ó What if Snopes
had posed its claim to be confirmed or debunked like this, though?
The
national press is essentially blacking out the news of the curious violent
death of an important official in the Trump administration.
Is
there any way that they could pronounce that claim to be false? They might make the feeble observation that
it was on Cleveland.com, and the Cleveland
Plain Dealer had an obituary and The
Washington Times did actually report the death, but in doing so they would
only call attention, in the breech, to all the important news organs that they
were unable to cite in order to deny the claim.
So
what we have here, folks, is a scandal of very great proportions, and the
parallels with the Foster death are palpable. Where are all those people in the
mainstream press who seem to spare no effort to make Trump look bad? In a word, where is Jim Acosta when you
need him? Bill Clinton had his
enemies in the conservative press, as well, but it took months before the fake
critic, Christopher Ruddy, emerged to voice a bit of skepticism about the Vince
Foster Òsuicide.Ó Now with the
Internet, the only ones so far voicing suspicion are a couple of truly obscure
right-wing web sites. But for Mike RiveroÕs WhatReallyHappened.com, who publicized the
Cleveland.com report and called it a case of a person Òbeating himself to
death,Ó the news would be almost completely buried.
Why Was Daniel
Best Murdered?
Anyone
with a pulse should know at this point that Daniel Best must have been
murdered. The news blackout across
the political spectrum tells us that it was a political murder of major
significance. So who did it and
why? The obvious conclusion to jump
to is that it was Big Pharma. In deserting their ranks, carrying all
of the tricks of their trade with him, in order to help Donald Trump bring down
the prices of their products he was something of a traitor to them, wasnÕt he? A live Daniel Best could have cost them
all a great deal of money.
And
then there are those other people who threatened Big PharmaÕs
bottom line. We are talking about
the reports of a number of suspicious deaths of practitioners of alternative
medicine around the world. ThatÕs
another one that Snopes claims to have debunked,
so there might well be something to it.
But do
the large drug companies as a group have the power to completely muzzle the
news media? The mainstream media
report apparently critical things about them on a regular basis. Perhaps we have to go a bit more deeply
into the Deep State to get answers as to the ÒwhyÓ and the ÒwhoÓ of BestÕs
apparent murder. For this we go
back to an article that we posted a little more than a year ago, ÒHHS
Nominee Deep State Made Man.Ó It is about the man who made the
announcement of BestÕs death, the now head of Health and Human Services, Alex Azar. The title
refers to the fact that Azar was a member of Kenneth
StarrÕs team, along with Brett Kavanaugh, that covered
up Vince FosterÕs murder. Service
there has proved to be a sure-fire ticket for establishment promotion. As the defector from their ranks told
Accuracy in MediaÕs Reed Irvine at the time, ÒTheyÕll do what it takes to move
up the ladder.Ó And they did.
What
was the purpose of putting one of these Òmade men,Ó like Kavanaugh
and the Clintons, a Yale Law School product, in charge of HHS, I wondered in
the article:
After leaving the Starr team he worked for a
Washington law firm for five years and then, in August of 2001, President
George W. Bush appointed him to be general counsel for Health and Human
Services. Having proven himself to
be a good and loyal soldier who would go along to get along, as they say, he
was in a key position when those mysterious anthrax attacks came along.
Again, Wikipedia reports it blandly: ÒAzar played an important role in responding to the 2001 anthrax attacksÉÓ Since he had already been carefully vetted by his work on the
Starr team, the true perpetrators of the anthrax attacks could be confident
that the important role that Azar
would play did not involve nosing around too much into the actual origins of
the anthrax spores used in the attacks.
But is Azar
qualified to be the head of the cabinet office that has the responsibility for
overseeing the nationÕs health, you might ask. It depends, I think, on what you mean by
ÒqualifiedÓ and in whose eyes he might be so. If a major false flag attack of a biological
sort is in the works, then I couldnÕt think of a better ÒqualifiedÓ person than
Azar to head up HHS. Or maybe they just wanted to make sure
that our top health guy would continue to perpetuate the myth that the CIA-fueled heroin epidemic that is ravaging the
country is really a prescription painkiller ÒopioidÓ epidemic, even at the
expense of scapegoating his buddies in the pharmaceutical industry.
Azar was head of drug
giant Eli LillyÕs entire U.S. operations before being made HHS head, and Wikipedia tells us that during his tenure, which began January 1,
2012, ÒPrices of drugs rose substantially.Ó Hmm!
Actually
killing Best seems awfully extreme.
CouldnÕt Azar just have sent him quietly back
to the drug industry? Perhaps Best
had stumbled upon something more sinister even than the CIA involvement in the
illicit drug business. Maybe it
involves something truly horrible that our rulers have planned for us that we
will only discover when it happens.
I speculate along those lines in my article, ÒWas
Katharine Graham Killed for 9/11.Ó That was a July
2001 death that they called an accident, but as in the case of Best, the
authorities were very stingy with the actual details. Had Graham been let in on the 9/11 false
flag plans and had she balked at going along with them, I speculate.
Another
possibility is that Best might have touched the same dark, sinister political
third rail that Vince Foster did.
After all, we still donÕt know for sure why Foster was killed, as we see
in ÒWas Vince FosterÕs Murder PizzaGate-Related?Ó That netherworld is explored further in
ÒWhy
Hillary Used a Private Server.Ó
All we
can say for sure is that, by the secretiveness with which they are treating
Daniel BestÕs violent death, the despots who rule us these days are giving us
every reason to believe the worst. ÒAmerican
Gothic,Ó a poem that I posted more than
twenty years ago, is looking better by the day.
David
Martin
November
28, 2018
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