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'Pandemic of the Unvaccinated' Was Misleading Narrative: Pfizer Exec Confirms Shot Not Tested for Transmissibility

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President Joe Biden’s oft-repeated talking point that COVID-19 was a “pandemic of the unvaccinated” was further undermined last week by the testimony of a Pfizer executive before the European Parliament.

Janine Small, Pfizer’s president of international developed markets, stated that the company’s COVID-19 vaccine was not tested for its ability to prevent transmission of the virus prior to it being distributed.

“So there are no misunderstandings: Was the Pfizer COVID vaccine tested on stopping the transmission of the virus before it entered the market?” Rob Roos, a member of Parliament from the Netherlands, asked Small at an Oct. 10 hearing before the EU’s Special Committee on the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brussels.

“If not, please say it clearly. If yes, are you willing to share the data with this committee? And I really want a straight answer, yes or no, and I’m looking forward to it,” Roos said.

“No,” Small responded. “We had to really move at the speed of science to really understand what is taking place in the market.”

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To be clear, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in a December 2020 news release announcing its emergency use authorization of the Pfizer vaccine made no claim that it would prevent transmission.

“At this time, data are not available to make a determination about how long the vaccine will provide protection, nor is there evidence that the vaccine prevents transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from person to person,” the FDA said.

An Associated Press fact-check also noted, “Pfizer never claimed to have studied the issue before the vaccine’s market release.”

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Additionally, Reuters reported that BioNTech — the company that partnered with Pfizer to manufacture the vaccine — stated publicly at that time that it would take three to six months of further study to answer the transmissibility question.

Roos tweeted last week that the “get vaccinated for others” push by his own government was a lie, recounting that the public was told “if you don’t get vaccinated, you’re anti-social” and “you don’t get vaccinated just for yourself, but also for others.”

“Today, this turns out to be complete nonsense,” Roos said.


Roos told Reuters that his problem is not with Pfizer.

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“My message isn’t about Pfizer at all. My message is about governments using a misleading argument to infringe on fundamental rights. Governments worldwide have introduced COVID mandates and passports that had an enormous impact on millions of people,” he said via email.

The AP pointed out that public officials, including Biden, “have suggested on multiple occasions that COVID-19 vaccines prevent transmission, but that’s an overstatement.”

In September 2021 remarks from the White House, Biden said, “This is a pandemic of the unvaccinated.”

The following month in Illinois, the president stated that he was requiring all military personnel, federal employees and federal contractors to get vaccinated.

“We’re making sure health care workers are vaccinated, because if you seek care at a health care facility, you should have the certainty that the people providing that care are protected from COVID and cannot spread it to you,” Biden said.

“The fact is, this has been a pandemic of the unvaccinated. Unvaccinated. The unvaccinated overcrowd our hospitals, overrunning emergency rooms and intensive care units.”

Biden also announced at the Illinois event that his administration would be rolling out a nationwide vaccine mandate for companies employing 100 people or more, which the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in January.

In July, Dr. Debra Birx, the former White House COVID-19 response coordinator, told Fox News host Neil Cavuto she “knew these vaccines were not going to protect against infection.”

“I think we overplayed the vaccines, and it made people then worry that it’s not going to protect against severe disease and hospitalization. It will,” she added. “But let’s be very clear: 50 percent of the people who died from the omicron surge were older, vaccinated.”

Both Reuters and the AP highlighted in their fact-checks that studies found that the COVID vaccines reduced transmission, especially of the early variants, but did not prevent the spread of the virus.

Hindsight is obviously 20/20, but officials like Biden wrongly used fear, guilt and the power of the federal government to push people to get vaccinated based in part on a false proposition about the vaccines’ ability to stop or greatly limit the spread of COVID.

How many thousands of Americans lost their jobs because they did not comply with mandates misleadingly sold to the public?

A version of this article originally appeared on Patriot Project.

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