Vaccines are safe and effective, but are they safe for everyone? Senators Blumenthal and Sheldon Whitehouse are joined by pediatric neurologist Dr. Scott Gottlieb and pediatric infectious disease physician Dr. Robert Malone to argue that vaccines are safe, and that they should be the only consumer products with liability for injuries they cause.
00:00:00.000The kids whose parents typically don't need these vaccines.
00:00:03.240Can I just say one thing about the autism bit, just because it's been bandied about?
00:00:06.540You know, we sued the CDC for the studies that support that the vaccines given in the first month of life do not cause autism.
00:00:13.120We sued them because they wouldn't give it to us.
00:00:14.820We said, give us the studies that show the meningococcal vaccine, the polio vaccine, the hep B vaccine, the Hib vaccine, and the hep B vaccine.
00:00:21.540Those five vaccines don't cause autism.
00:00:51.520He wasn't even having measles when he died, and we'll be putting out a support on that.
00:00:55.080And somebody else has reviewed the medical records of a second kid.
00:00:57.560I agree we shouldn't engage in fear-mongering.
00:01:00.820And if we're talking about the overview of the scientific literature, instead of randomly looking at studies, maybe start with the Institute of Medicine reviews of the entire body of literature from 1991, 94, 2012, the HRQ reports.
00:01:12.120And you can see how vacuous vaccine safety science is.
00:01:18.740Look, if vaccines are so safe, why are they the only consumer product where you cannot sue the manufacturer for injuries to claim who's made safe there?
00:01:28.740It's been 30, it's been 1980, it's been over 30 years of telling you, be safe, hip safe, these are safe.
00:06:24.820But Amy Kelly and Naomi Wolf and Daily Clout and the 3,500 volunteers from the War Room Posse that went through all that data, all that analysis, came out with two best-selling books.
00:06:42.240The Pfizer Papers and Naomi was over at the European Parliament this week.
00:07:34.080But we get a little bit of a break on Fridays and Sundays by doing a roundup of memes that other people have posted previously.
00:07:42.920They're sourced from many different places.
00:07:45.080And we typically cluster them around topic areas.
00:07:50.340Now, unfortunately, the morning, and just a little more context, of course, I speak here as a private party.
00:07:58.440Even though I am appointed as a special government employee, serve at the discretion of the secretary on the advisory committee on immunization practices for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
00:08:10.420I have 30 years of experience in vaccine development.
00:08:15.140I have multiple fundamental patents and discoveries, of which six have to do with mRNA vaccines.
00:08:23.720They were all filed between 1990 and 1991 that have subsequently issued.
00:08:30.740Those are the foundational documents in RNA vaccination history.
00:08:36.020They go back to my original invention disclosure about the use of RNA as a drug at the Salk Institute, working in Inder Verma's lab in the molecular biology and virology laboratories of the Salk Institute, circa 1987.
00:08:49.360This predates the work of Curieco and Weissman by well over a decade.
00:08:54.120mRNA vaccines were reduced to practice at Vical in approximately 1991.
00:09:01.720I hold over 100 papers, thousands and thousands of citations.
00:09:08.980I'm recognized internationally for my work.
00:09:12.340And as I say, it goes far beyond mRNA vaccines.
00:09:16.380I've been asked to testify at the World Health Organization twice.
00:09:19.260I played a key role in bringing forward the new public health agency of Canada vaccine for Ebola and got it sold to the company Merck because I believed Merck was the most appropriate firm to further develop that vaccine.
00:09:38.560And I helped get hundreds of millions of dollars of federal funding to support the development of that Ebola vaccine at Merck, which was subsequently licensed.
00:09:54.540I taught medical school pathology for decades.
00:09:57.060But when I spoke about medical ethics early on in the COVID crisis and the fact that coercion, compulsion, and enticement were not consistent with the norms of medical ethics, a discipline that I've been trained in extensively because I do clinical research,
00:10:16.980that led to my being asked to comment about the technology for RNA vaccination, having developed it.
00:10:26.940And that led to an incredible wave of hate and blacklisting and defamation.
00:10:36.900Now, among those were many articles from, say, New York Times, The Washington Post, Atlantic Monthly, Business Insider, et cetera, et cetera.
00:10:43.800But the consequence of this was that my consulting business that had been operating for over 20 years was destroyed.
00:10:53.020It's not the first time that I'd been a whistleblower and had my profession destroyed.
00:10:57.840Unlike some of these folks as physicians that were unwilling to speak out, I have spoken out.
00:11:03.520I spoke out in particular about the death that occurred at UPenn having to do with Jesse Gelsinger and the use of adenovirus vectored gene therapy.
00:11:13.800And when I did that, I destroyed my academic career, which is why I transitioned to working primarily with the U.S. Army, particularly working in biodefense.
00:11:25.260I have many friends within the biodefense sector, have worked in there for years, have secret clearance from the Department of Defense,
00:11:33.640have been involved in virtually every major biodefense vaccine product that has been developed for the U.S. military.
00:11:43.800But I destroyed, again, my consulting business by speaking out about what I was observing, particularly about the bioethics of the mandates, the coercion and enticement that occurred.
00:11:57.900And since then, I've had to find some way to make a living.
00:12:03.320And the way that I make a living as a licensed physician is to publish a substack essay once a day, day after day after day, year after year after year.
00:12:17.740And as I said, every Friday and every Sunday, my wife and one of our associates pulls together memes from the prior week, assembles them around topic areas, and publishes them.
00:12:31.320Unfortunately, the morning, and your initial statements conflated this, the timeline, the morning of Friday, when this unfortunate event occurred at the CDC,
00:12:46.900we published one of the memes of many, including one that referenced you and your attacks on Janine Piero, accusing her of being a conspiracy theorist.
00:13:00.260But in that collection of memes, there was one that used a metaphor for random chance with severe outcomes.
00:13:09.880It is just like any form of roulette, only it has a very severe outcome.
00:13:22.620And that particular meme meant to make a point that when you have a random event with a severe outcome,
00:13:31.680it can appear statistically to be inconsequential.