Pfizer Chairman and CEO Albert Bourla and World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab both say they were the targets of conspiracy theorists and "anti-vaccine movements."."With a vaccine, we knew there [was] a very fanatic group of anti-vaxxers that will go after us, no matter what," Bourla said during a World Health Assembly panel on Wednesday.."They will claim that the sun didn't come up because people were vaccinated, and that created issues with the crop, so we are suing you," he said..Schwab responded, "I think we were both targets of the anti-vaccine movements and conspiracy people claiming that I had triple-COVID.".Bourla said at one point he read a fake article online claiming he had been arrested by the FBI.."The surprising thing was, the same publication published that the previous one [who] was arrested was the Pope. At least I was in good company," he joked..In response to a question posed by Schwab about how many vaccines would be needed in the future, Bourla said he was concerned with people not complying "with the recommendations of the experts."."For that reason, we need to find the solution that makes it easy for people to get vaccinated," he said, adding Pfizer's priority was to create a vaccine that lasts a year.".Bourla's comments came on the same day Pfizer announced they would be supplying vaccines on a not-for-profit basis to 1.2 billion people in lower-income countries..Bourla said Pfizer has a surplus of billions of COVID vaccine doses sitting unused in warehouses around the world.."They can't use them right now because we discovered it's one thing to supply, it's another to have an educated population that believes the vaccine is doing well," he said..Pfizer nearly doubled their revenues in 2021 due to COVID-19 vaccines, allowing it to rack up $91.3 billion in profits.
Pfizer Chairman and CEO Albert Bourla and World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab both say they were the targets of conspiracy theorists and "anti-vaccine movements."."With a vaccine, we knew there [was] a very fanatic group of anti-vaxxers that will go after us, no matter what," Bourla said during a World Health Assembly panel on Wednesday.."They will claim that the sun didn't come up because people were vaccinated, and that created issues with the crop, so we are suing you," he said..Schwab responded, "I think we were both targets of the anti-vaccine movements and conspiracy people claiming that I had triple-COVID.".Bourla said at one point he read a fake article online claiming he had been arrested by the FBI.."The surprising thing was, the same publication published that the previous one [who] was arrested was the Pope. At least I was in good company," he joked..In response to a question posed by Schwab about how many vaccines would be needed in the future, Bourla said he was concerned with people not complying "with the recommendations of the experts."."For that reason, we need to find the solution that makes it easy for people to get vaccinated," he said, adding Pfizer's priority was to create a vaccine that lasts a year.".Bourla's comments came on the same day Pfizer announced they would be supplying vaccines on a not-for-profit basis to 1.2 billion people in lower-income countries..Bourla said Pfizer has a surplus of billions of COVID vaccine doses sitting unused in warehouses around the world.."They can't use them right now because we discovered it's one thing to supply, it's another to have an educated population that believes the vaccine is doing well," he said..Pfizer nearly doubled their revenues in 2021 due to COVID-19 vaccines, allowing it to rack up $91.3 billion in profits.