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Someone made a good point about Paxlovid. This anti-viral (cost: $530) is prescribed to people in order to prevent "severe" symptoms or death. But isn't this an admission that the vaccines don't work? If nothing else, we've been told over and over that the vaccines prevent "severe" cases. Well, apparently they don't because if they did millions of people wouldn't need Paxlovid.

Here's today's real message: The vaccines don't prevent infection, nor spread and they really don't prevent severe cases either ... which is why you need all your vaccines and must take Paxlovid once you test positive (which you will, multiple times) ... So Pfizer has made $80 billion on vaccines that don't work and now they are making billions more on some pills that are prescribed because their vaccine didn't work. And the government pays for all this and does all your advertising and makes sure you can't be sued. It's a good business to be in, I guess. The more your products fail, the more money your company makes.

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Bill, it's ***ONLY*** the unvaccinated who need Paxlovid :)

I'm not sure why Biden got it. Maybe they thought he was unvaxxed?!?!

but seriously, this is an excellent point!

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If the Pfizer vaccine was a normal product, people in mass would be demanding their money back. "I got this vaccine (or booster) only because I thought it prevented severe cases .... Now you're telling me I have to spend $530 more for these pills so that I won't get a severe case. What the heck? I'm calling the Better Business Bureau on you guys!"

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Good point. Dr. Deborah Birx recently admitted that they overplayed the jabs, but she continues to claim that they prevent severe disease.

GB News' Mark Steyn explained Pfizer's business model very well recently:

"First they sell you the vaccine that 'prevents' you getting the disease. Then when you get the disease, they sell you the drug that 'cures' you of it. And then when you're 'cured' of it, you get it all over again three days later."

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