From Catherine Clifford for CNBC:
It is true that Moderna’s mRNA vaccine was ready remarkably fast, as was Pfizer’s.
Chinese scientists put the genetic sequence of the novel coronavirus online on Jan. 11. Over the next two days, the NIH and Moderna used it to plot out a vaccine.
Afeyan remembers getting a key call about the development of the Covid-19 vaccine. "January 21st, my daughter’s birthday ... I got a call from Davos [during The World Economic Forum] from the CEO of Moderna," he says. Bancel had been approached by a number of public health groups at the conference "urging" him to work on a vaccine.
It is worth noting the vaccines were created in response to a genetic sequence provided by the Chinese - NOT the virus itself. And if the impetus for the vaccine came from the WEF, then the entire thing may indeed be a "plot".
By the way, here is the author's resume:
Catherine Clifford is the senior entrepreneurship writer at CNBC. She was formerly a senior writer at Entrepreneur.com, the small business reporter at CNNMoney and an assistant in the New York bureau for CNN. Clifford attended Columbia University where she earned a bachelor’s degree. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., and is an avid yogi.
How any of that qualifies her to write knowledgeably about vaccines is a mystery to me. Same goes for the advice of movie stars, sports figures, and/or comics. Any vaccine advice they give seems WAY out of their lane.
Yes, the above report does contain tweets from people claiming to have PhDs, but that's hardly scientific "proof". And no scientist is going to keep their job if they try to tell you these "vaccines" are bad for you.
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