Included in that "article" was this
"The US Congress has passed a law which
exempts itself and staffs from COVID injection mandates, and this week,"
Congress did no such thing. The mandate is an Executive order and the Executive can not mandate to Congress.
Friggin idiots
And Malone was NOT the inventor of anything except a lot of coid misinformation that is getting people dead.
He worked on the project as an intern in the 1980s
Total lies.
First of all, presidents do not have any authority to issue any health care Executive Orders at all.
And in general, Executive Orders require general Congressional authorization first.
Dr. Robert Malone IS the inventor of the entire idea of doing mRNA techniques, such as used in the mRNA vaccines..
First of all, he rates a wiki page, which says something.
{...
Robert Wallace Malone is an
American virologist and
immunologist. His work has focused on
mRNA technology, pharmaceuticals, and drug repurposing research. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, he has been criticized for promoting
misinformation about the safety and effectiveness of
COVID-19 vaccines.
[1][2][3]
...
In the 1980s, while a researcher at the
Salk Institute, Malone conducted studies on messenger ribonucleic acid (
mRNA) technology, discovering that it was possible to transfer mRNA protected by a
liposome into cultured cells to signal the information needed for the production of proteins.
[5][6] In the early 1990s, he collaborated with
Jon A. Wolff,
Dennis A. Carson, and others on a study that first suggested the possibility of synthesizing mRNA in a laboratory to trigger the production of a desired protein.
[7] Malone claims to be the inventor of mRNA vaccines, although credit for the distinction is more often given to later advancements by
Katalin Karikó or
Derrick Rossi,
[8][5][9][10] and was ultimately the result of the contributions of hundreds of researchers, of which Malone was but one.
[11]
Malone has served as director of clinical affairs for
Avancer Group, a member of the scientific advisory board of
EpiVax, assistant professor at the
University of Maryland Baltimore school of medicine, and an adjunct associate professor of
biotechnology at
Kennesaw State University.
[12] He was CEO and co-founder of Atheric Pharmaceutical,
[13] which in 2016 was contracted by the
U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases to assist in the development of a treatment for the
Zika virus by evaluating the efficacy of existing drugs.
[14][15][16][17] Until 2020, Malone was chief medical officer at Alchem Laboratories, a Florida pharmaceutical company.
[18]
...
In early 2020, during the
COVID-19 pandemic, Malone was involved in research into the heartburn medicine
famotidine (Pepcid) as a
potential COVID-19 treatment following anecdotal evidence suggesting that it may have been associated with higher COVID-19 survival. Malone, then with Alchem Laboratories, suspected famotidine may target an enzyme that the virus (
SARS-CoV-2) uses to reproduce, and recruited a computational chemist to help design a 3D-model of the enzyme based on the viral sequence and comparisons to the
2003 SARS virus.
[19][20] After encouraging preliminary results, Alchem Laboratories, in conjunction with New York's
Northwell Health, initiated a clinical trial on famotidine and
hydroxychloroquine.
[19] Malone resigned from Alchem shortly after the trial began and Northwell paused the trial due to a shortage of hospitalized patients.
[18][21]
Malone received criticism for propagating
COVID-19 misinformation, including making unsupported claims about the alleged toxicity of
spike proteins generated by some
COVID-19 vaccines;
[6][10][22] using interviews on mass media to popularize self-medication with
ivermectin;
[23] and
tweeting a study by others questioning vaccine safety that was later retracted.
[6] He said
LinkedIn suspended his account over what he claimed were posts he had made questioning the efficacy of some COVID-19 vaccines.
[24] Malone has also claimed that the
Pfizer–BioNTech and
Moderna COVID-19 vaccines could worsen COVID-19 infections.
[25]
With another researcher, Malone successfully proposed to the publishers of
Frontiers in Pharmacology a special issue featuring early observational studies on existing medication used in the treatment of COVID-19, for which they recruited other guest editors, contributors, and reviewers. The journal rejected two of the papers selected: one on
famotidine co-authored by Malone and another submitted by physician
Pierre Kory on the use of
ivermectin.
[21] The publisher rejected the ivermectin paper due to what it stated were “a series of strong, unsupported claims” which they determined did “not offer an objective nor balanced scientific contribution.”
[21] Malone and most other guest editors resigned in protest in April 2021, and the special issue has been pulled from the journal's website.
[21]
Malone was criticized for falsely claiming that the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had not granted full approval to the Pfizer vaccine in August 2021.
[26]
....}
And it is obvious much of the criticism is fake.
For example, no one is harmed by the covid virus itself, but instead all the harm is done by the immune system over reaction to the virus.
That means the virus is not harmful itself, but is a cytotoxin.
But that means any vaccine based on the virus, such as the mRNA vaccines being based on the covid spike protein, will then also be cytotoxic, and run the same risk of immune system over reactions as the virus can cause.
This is extremely obvious to anyone, so then the attacks on Dr. Robert Malone are totally inappropriate.
There really is no one with sufficient standing to dispute him.