For months, the US CDC has covered up the poor results of a vaccination campaign that was supposed to end the epidemic. Invited to the Department of Medicine at Washington University on March 3, 2022, Rochelle Walensky, director of the American CDC, is struggling to hide her embarrassment in the face of what increasingly appears to be a failure with multiple consequences.
Since the launch of the vaccination campaign in December 2020, the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) has collected information. These data have not been made public, nor have those of other regulators such as the FDA.
To encourage the population to get vaccinated, CDC director Rochelle Walensky relied on data from the presentation of pharmaceutical companies in November 2020.
95% efficiency for Pfizer/BioNTech, 94% for Moderna, have been put forward by all regulators. Percentages that made all those who believed in these extraordinary results dream, giving hope for a rapid end to the epidemic.
“So many of us wanted to be helpful. So many of us wanted to say, ‘OK, that’s our ticket out, right?’ showed too little caution and too much optimism regarding some good things that have come our way,” the CDC director said, visibly confused.
1/3 “SO MANY of us WANTED the vaccine to be useful.”
“So I think we may have had, uh, too little caution and too much optimism.”
“it smells scorched”, episode I: Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC, tries to justify herself awkwardly. Pathetic. pic.twitter.com/DZFSrhP2QF– Pro-Science Collective (@GabinJean3) March 6, 2022
Today, as a court ruling ordered the FDA to declassify all Pfizer vaccine data, the excitement has given way to a somewhat less rosy reality; the vaccine does not prevent transmission, and concerns have arisen around serious side effects, in particular the risks of myocarditis and pericarditis recognized by the Pfizer laboratory. Faced with this new reality, Rochelle Walensky cannot hide her embarrassment.
See as well:
Pfizer trials on the anti-covid vaccine: the explosive report by Christine CottonUS court orders FDA to declassify Pfizer vaccine data