InvestorsHub Logo

BIzzy

04/15/21 10:07 AM

#355746 RE: capital gain #355744

Good Lord...you dont help IPIX by posting quack/junk "science" from Americas Frontline Doctors...their single biggest accomplishment is to gather dozens of quacks in one location so its easier to serve process on them...

think about it...the vaccines are secretly being deployed to depopulate America...it may take several showers to wash that stupid off

sunspotter

04/15/21 10:30 AM

#355752 RE: capital gain #355744

Interesting, but this conspiracy theory is like most of the other junk explaining why plucky little IPIX isn't already a multibillion company (obviously nothing to do with the fact its CEO is a grasping, dishonest and incompetent clown), completely batshit crazy stuff:

"Yeadon’s claims – which were made in a blog post on 16 October – have circulated online as part of attempts to discredit the company’s vaccine.

In the post, Yeadon argues that the pandemic is “effectively over” in the UK and that “there is absolutely no need for vaccines to extinguish the pandemic”. He also adds: “You do not vaccinate people who aren’t at risk from a disease.”

Yeadon’s employment by Pfizer suggests that his opinion on the rollout of the vaccine is credible.

However, Politifact has previously explained that Yeadon has not worked for Pfizer in nine years, citing both the Associated Press and his LinkedIn profile to show that he was formerly the chief scientific officer of allergy and respiratory research.

Several of the claims he makes in his blog are wrong, including the suggestion that the Covid-19 pandemic is over in the UK.

Earlier this month, parts of the UK – including Northern Ireland – re-introduced restrictions as new infections surged and fears of hospitals being overwhelmed mounted.

Even before Yeadon wrote his blog post, the country’s deputy chief medical officer Professor Jonathan Van-Tam warned that the UK was “at a tipping point similar to where we were in March”.

Latest data for the UK, published on 27 December, shows that there was over 30,000 new cases there in the previous 24 hours and almost 250,000 in the previous week.

Yeadon is incorrect in his suggestion that vaccines are not required, a claim that was repeated in the viral Facebook post containing his quotes.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has long maintained that the development of a vaccine would be crucial to fighting the virus.

Dr Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s health emergencies programme, told reporters that the world needs “to develop more vaccines”.

“It’s not just the vaccines that matter, it’s vaccination,” he said recently. “It will be very important that we focus on that delivery part.”

Earlier this month, director of the National Virus Reference Laboratory Dr Cillian de Gascun also told The Explainer podcast that vaccines had “revolutionised the prevention of infectious diseases” like Covid-19.

“We would expect that if the vaccine doesn’t entirely prevent infection, it still should ensure that the amount of transmission that occurs from people who are vaccinated should be reduced,” he said.

Meanwhile, figures from the World Health Organization show that vaccines which protect against diseases such as diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, influenza and measles save the lives of up to three million people each year.

A successful Covid-19 vaccine will likewise prevent millions from dying from that virus.

Yeadon also makes a related claim that people are not at risk from Covid-19, suggesting that ”millions of fit and healthy” people do not require the vaccine.

Both claims are untrue, because everyone is at risk of Covid-19. As an infectious disease transmitted by humans, anyone (except those who build up antibodies to it) can catch it.

In that sense, everyone – including fit and healthy people – either needs to get a vaccine or continue socially distancing to stop them both catching Covid-19 and from passing it on to others.

It is also worth noting that many of those who contract the virus, including young people, continue to suffer from after-effects for months afterwards.

There have been a number of instances of high-profile “fit and healthy” individuals – including Shamrock Rovers footballer Jack Byrne and Premier League footballers - being adversely affected by the virus."


https://www.thejournal.ie/debunked-pfizer-employee-quotes-mike-yeadon-covid-19-vaccine-5311935-Dec2020/