How Bill Gates Helped Drug Companies Maintain Their Monopoly On Vaccines During COVID infowars.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from infowars.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
(AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
It might be time to ease off listening to some of the doctors and scientists making a name for themselves during the coronavirus pandemic. There is a really good example in the news this weekend. Dr. Peter Hotez in Houston, a darling of local and national news outlets, has some hot takes when it comes to COVID-19 vaccines and vaccine skepticism.
Dr. Hotez has an impressive resume which includes being “founding dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine, Professor of Pediatrics and Molecular Virology & Microbiology at Baylor College of Medicine, where he is also Director of the Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development and Texas Children’s Hospital Endowed Chair in Tropical Pediatrics, and University Professor of Biology at Baylor University.” He and his team have developed a COVID-19 vaccine that is set to be manufactured in India. So, he is frequently a guest on cable news shows to deliver his comments about the pandemic
How Bill Gates Impeded Global
Access to Covid Vaccines
Through his hallowed foundation, the world’s de facto public health czar has been a stalwart defender of monopoly medicine.
Illustration by Kelsey Dake
On February 11, 2020, public health and infectious disease experts gathered
by the hundreds at the World Health Organization’s Geneva mothership. The official pronouncement of a pandemic was still a month out, but the
agency’s international brain trust knew enough to be worried. Burdened by a
sense of borrowed time, they spent two days furiously sketching an “R&D Blueprint”
in preparation for a world upended by the virus then known as 2019-nCoV.
Game-changing COVID-19 variant spreading fast among children, experts say
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Children are not immune to COVID-19, experts are now reiterating.
Dr. Michael Osterholm at the University of Minnesota s Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy was previously in favor of sending children back to school, claiming they didn t have to worry as much about the virus, per KTRK-13.
But a new variant identified in the United Kingdom has Osterholm switching courses, and he s not the only infectious disease expert who is concerned. We have to think about the B.1.1.7 variant as almost a brand new virus, said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, per CBS46 s Christina Maxouris. It s acting differently from anything we ve seen before, in terms of transmissibility, in terms of affecting young people, so we have to take this very seriously.
Разработан проект об ускорении блокировки карт пострадавших от мошенников bankir.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bankir.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.