Posted on 01/04/2022 4:12:02 PM PST by MtnClimber
It was a great interview that Joe Rogan had with Dr. Robert Malone, M.D. It is over 3 hours, but well worth it, even if you watch it a bit at a time. A link is in this article at the source link.
Joe Rogan gets about 11 million viewers per episode. CNN Primetime gets far less than a tenth of that. He has the audience.
What exactly makes Dr Malone “the mRNA inventor”?
Enter Joe Rogan and bid adieu to the MSM ossified relics.
Dr. Malone is an outstanding communicator.
Dr Malone worked on Army research that developed the mRNA technology, not the mRNA application to COVID.
Al Gore invented the internet just like Malone invented mRNA.
By the way, even Dr. Malone has never made as nonsensical a claim as to have “invented” mRNA. The people who write these articles don’t have a clue what they are talking about (at best).
Why does anyone take the garbage on substack seriously? How much more ridiculous can you get?
Intentional misinterpretations of what he has said.
“Intentional misinterpretations of what he has said.”
He was the one that was saying it for a long time, or at least not discouraging others from saying it.
I think he’s backed off from that recently since he’s gotten more attention.
Malone made an important contribution early on. So did a lot of others without whom mRNA would not have advanced. And of course Malone’s early paper includes two co-authors, whom he somehow fails to ever mention.
“Al Gore invented the internet just like Malone invented mRNA.”
Good call.
“By the way, even Dr. Malone has never made as nonsensical a claim as to have “invented” mRNA”
I think he says “inventor of mRNA technology”. Whichever version he rolls with it’s an exaggeration and his peers don’t back him up. He could be hoping for Nobel recognition or patent claims. Who knows. His new fan club may end up disappointed.
It was excellent as was the interview with Dr. Peter McCullough.
He threatens the bottom line. I get it. We all have to fill our rice bowls.
I would argue Project Veritas is in the mix as well. They have CNN on their heels.
As best I could understand, he had a major hand in the discovery of early RNA technology which ultimately made the vaccines a possibility. I read awhile back that the scientist who developed the Moderna vaccine gave him some credit in one of her interviews.
I dunno about an Army connection. His first paper, co-authored with Felgner and Verma in 1989, is the one that puts him on the map. Salk Institute. He may well have had more to do with the paper than his co-authors. This is where his “inventor” claim originates:
https://www.pnas.org/content/pnas/86/16/6077.full.pdf
Lose.
Losing.
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