Vax Was Never Tested to Prevent Transmission: Pfizer Director

The director’s admission was contrary to previous advertisements.

QUICK FACTS:
  • Pfizer President of International Developed Markets Janine Small admitted their vaccine was never tested on its ability to prevent transmission of viral infection.
  • The director made the admission during an EU hearing about Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine that was used worldwide and advertised as a way of preventing the spread of the virus.
  • When asked by a politician from the Netherlands, Robert “Rob” Roos, whether the vaccine was tested to stop transmission before entering the market, Small responded in the negative.
  • “Regarding the question around did we know about stopping immunization before it entered the market? No,” Small said. “We have to really move at the speed of science to really understand what is taking place in the market.”
ROO’S COMMENTS:
  • “If you don’t get vaccinated, you’re antisocial. This is what the Dutch prime minister and health minister told us. You don’t get vaccinated just for yourself, but also for others. You do it for all of society, that’s what they said. Today, this turned out to be complete nonsense,” Roos said in his viral video posted on Twitter.
  • “In a COVID hearing in the European Parliament, one of the Pfizer directors just admitted to me at the time of introduction, the vaccine had never been tested on stopping the transmission of the virus,” Roos said. “This removed the entire legal basis for the covert passport. The COVID passport that led to massive institutional discrimination as people lost access to essential parts of society. I find this to be shocking, even criminal.”
BACKGROUND:
  • The state of Florida recently recommended against mRNA vaccines for men aged 18-39, as American Faith previously reported.
  • Sweden has also stopped recommending COVID-19 vaccines for children between the ages of 12 and 17, citing a “very low risk of serious illness and death from COVID-19” in children and teens.”
  • Another report indicates that mRNA from vaccines has been found in the breast milk of nursing mothers.

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