reSee.it Podcast Summary
This episode examines Pfizer, Operation Warp Speed, and the push toward mRNA/DNA vaccine technologies. Whitney Webb notes that Trump and Warp Speed leaders praised Pfizer and repeated a “ninety percent effective” claim that Pfizer presents as self-reported and not yet publicly scrutinized, while Fauci says vaccination will not restore normalcy and masks and distancing will continue.
Johnny Vedmore explains the difference between DNA and mRNA vaccines, stressing that mRNA vaccines change a function of DNA rather than its sequence and could open the door to broader gene therapies. He notes the FDA has never approved an mRNA vaccine, the long‑term health effects are unknown, and the technology could move toward transhumanist medicine. He adds that Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech have competed, with Moderna reporting higher efficacy.
Vedmore traces Pfizer’s moves: purchasing PowderMed (a DNA vaccine company) early on, then partnering with BioNTech to outrun Moderna. He warns that media framing often avoids the nuance of DNA vs. RNA changes. A BBC piece quotes Pfizer’s Andrew Widger saying the vaccine “does not alter the DNA sequence of the human body” while omitting deeper mechanisms.
The Kano State Trovan trial in 1996 is recounted: 200 Nigerian children were exposed to an experimental drug; deaths and disabilities followed, and Pfizer settled for about $75 million, with families sometimes forced to DNA-test relatives to claim eligibility. He notes Pfizer’s later recruitment of 12-year-olds in the US and an FDA investigation that was reportedly dropped.
In the UK, Matt Hancock promised “hope injected into the arms of millions before Christmas.” The discussion centers on Five Eyes surveillance, GCHQ’s efforts to police vaccine skepticism, and the convergence of intelligence, health tech, and DARPA-linked ventures, including wearables for pharmacovigilance managed by Google and Oracle.