Pfizer deploys meme science to fight vaccine misinformation

US drug-maker Pfizer has followed up its CEOâs denunciation of Covid-19 vaccine âmisinformationâ by tweeting a cartoon about âscienceâ protecting humanity from âwild conspiracy theoriesâ â" and disabling the replies.
The cartoon shows a blob labeled âscienceâ holding back a humanoid figure from embracing a bubble labeled âwild conspiracy theories.â
âItâs easy to get distracted by misinformation these days, but donât worryâ¦Science has got your back,â Pfizerâs corporate account tweeted on Tuesday evening, along with a hashtag #ScienceWillWin.
The option to reply was disabled. This did not seem to stop people rationing the tweet, with over 3,000 quote-tweets compared to just 300 or so likes within less than two hours.
âPfizer denies science, thatâs why it obtained a legal waiver of responsibility. No one harmed by Pfizerâs vaccines can sue the drug manufacturer,â said filmmaker Mike Cernovich, responding with his own version of the meme.
Pfizer denies science, thatâs why it obtained a legal waiver of responsibility. No one harmed by Pfizerâs vaccines can sue the drug manufacturer. pic.twitter.com/wxJ87dhMt8
â" Cernovich (@Cernovich) November 9, 2021âBig Pharma canât meme,â quipped Human Events editor Jack Posobiec.
The companyâs meme attempt comes shortly after its CEO Albert Bourla said a âvery smallâ group of people were spreading âmisinformationâ about Covid-19 vaccines, including the mRNA jabs made by Pfizer.
âTheyâre criminals because they have literally cost millions of lives,â he told the NATO-backed Atlantic Council think tank. âThe only thing that stands between the new way of life and the current way of life is, frankly, hesitancy to vaccinations,â he added later in the presentation.
Also on rt.com Pfizer CEO calls people spreading vaccine âmisinformationâ criminalsThe US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the use of Pfizerâs booster shots for the elderly and those at high risk in September, and last month green-lit a smaller dose for use in children ages 5-11. On Tuesday, Pfizer asked the FDA to approve the booster shots for all American adults.
Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!
0 Response to "Pfizer deploys meme science to fight vaccine misinformation"
Post a Comment