People who spread misinformation on Covid-19 vaccines are “criminals” and have cost “millions of lives,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said on Tuesday according to a report by CNBC.
Speaking with Washington D.C.-based think tank Atlantic Council, Bourla said there is a group of people that purposefully circulate misinformation on the shots and mislead those who are already hesitant about taking the experimental injection.
“Those people are criminals,” he told Atlantic Council CEO Frederick Kempe. “They’re not bad people. They’re criminals because they have literally cost millions of lives.”
Bourla’s comments come as millions of eligible adults in the U.S. have chosen to not take the COVID-19 shot despite their wide availability and massive push through both bibes and coercion by institutions across the nation including entertainment, media, big tech, large private corporations, elected officials & government agencies.
CNBC reported that public health “experts” say “misinformation” is likely playing a large role in why millions of Americans have made the personal decision to not take the experimental Covid-19 shot.
Bourla also said Tuesday that those not taking the shot are the result of the continued pandemic and assaults on liberty by the government, claiming life for many people can go “back to normal” if more get jabbed.
“The only thing that stands between the new way of life and the current way of life is, frankly, hesitancy to vaccinations,” he said.
Many Americans have continued to stand firm and refuse coercion to take the experimental Cobvid-19 shot, even as an arguably unconstitutional vaccine mandate by the Biden administration is poised to take effect on January 4th, conveniently just after massive expected economic activity in the Christmas season. A growing number of people believe that the government has been intentionally lying about the safety and efficacy of the Big Pharma taxpayer-funded jabs, with a recent unexplained disappearance of almost two weeks by California Governor Gavin Newsom following his third COVID booster shot raising suspicion.