"SARS-CoV vaccine, produced with a technology that has a safety record established by immunizing hundreds of millions of persons.... "
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/11/8/04-1003_article
Btw- that safety person was Angela Hwang worked as quality Control, quality Assurance, and Regulatory Affairs for Chiron Corporation(lost their license.) She was the Senior Program Officer at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for 10 years.
said, "resulting in failed trials (For the vaccine iFlu)"
True it was only tested in the US in Maryland. Italy an China it was distributed (Those where that I could find. It was easier to find those that their drug control system refused (Germany, UK, South Korea and the US)
In 2012 under the name of Novartis the FDA and many European countries banned their vaccine for similar reason. This one was directed at people 65 and older which is kind of freaking creepy(Fluvirin, Fluad and Agrippal.) Each time before they mass produced they say they fixed it. Now under the name of GlaxoSmithKline. Which is one of those making the new vaccine for the coronavirus.
All these companies Gates financed in some way. Note each of these companies sold and resold and is the same organization under a new name.
That doesn't mean SARS vaccine was ever widely injected into humans. Again, as far as I've seen, no SARS vaccine ever made past trials and into deployment, which should obviously be a red flag considering at least half a dozen companies tried. Rushing the vaccine could be a huge mistake, or it could be a huge success. I'm not in a high risk category so I'll be waiting a while. Some people won't have a choice due to their employment or other factors. I have immediate family and several friends working for "big pharma", so forgive me if I don't see them as evil. Bill Gates has ABSOLUTELY ZERO involvement in their vaccine efforts beyond donating money.
Everyone and their brother is working on multiple vaccine candidates, including Novartis, J&J, GSK, Sanofi, Moderna, Pfizer, Inovio, a bunch of smaller companies and a dozen or more universities. Some of them are going into production before human trials based on successful animal trials, and taking other shortcuts with the blessing of the FDA. A few are sticking to established research principals and plan to conduct trials in 2021.
Personally, I'm hoping for a pharmacological solution. There are many trials, both in progress and planned, with drugs old and new, and it seems this virus does have some weaknesses that can be targeted. Some of these drugs could have wide applications as a general anti-viral, and that would be a much bigger deal than a vaccine.