Saturday, October 23, 2021

Fake vaccine chief demands that people put their lives and health at risk, and those of their children, by getting the fake jab to avoid a ‘Zoom Christmas’. Note how – ‘get the jab’ is always accompanied by a threat

 

Often, after a long and taxing day at work, I let off steam by going running in London’s parks.

But at weekends, I like to go mountain biking in the beautiful Welsh hills, an exhilarating but somewhat risky pastime on the steep, rugged slopes. And in my long career as a biochemist and venture capitalist, I have also taken risks.

I have spent three decades identifying and investing in drugs that could be the next big scientific breakthrough to help patients suffering from life-threatening or debilitating illnesses.

Each investment involves a degree of both uncertainty and optimism. In other words, I am neither risk-averse nor given to gloom or panic.

Yet I am now, I admit, deeply worried. It is a situation I could not have imagined just months ago.

In May last year, during the first lockdown, I received a life-changing call from the Prime Minister, asking me to lead the Government’s Vaccine Taskforce.

‘We need to start saving lives,’ Boris Johnson told me. ‘And I need you to help.’

He wanted me to use my experience to identify a vaccine against Covid-19 that could be produced in mass quantities and safely administered to the public, both in the UK and around the world.

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