YouTube has removed a video of a podcast where Dr. Robert Malone, who invented the mRNA vaccine technology, raised concerns about the potential risk of coronavirus vaccines, according to him.
YouTube’s removal: Malone tweeted earlier this month that YouTube took down a video of an episode of Bret Weinstein’s podcast “DarkHorse” where he and Steve Kirsch discussed the COVID-19 vaccines, as well as questions and concerns about them.
He also told Fox News that YouTube deleted the video.
The entire podcast episode is available on BitChute. You can watch it here.
Worth noting: It is unclear what video YouTube removed from the platform but there are currently two videos available on the platform from the podcast. One video, published on June 13, claims that “Spike protein is very dangerous, it’s cytotoxic” and another, posted on June 19, is titled “Informed consent and reproductive toxicity of vaccines.”
Reuters fact-checked the claim that spike protein is “cytotoxic.” It claims the assertion is “false.”
Malone later appeared on Fox News for an interview with host Tucker Carlson, where he accused the government of a lack of transparency and argued that people should be able to decide for themselves whether they should get vaccinated or not.
He called the COVID-19 vaccines “experimental.”
“[O]ne of my concerns are that the government is not being transparent with us about what those risks are. And so, I am of the opinion that people have the right to decide whether to accept vaccines or not, especially since these are experimental vaccines,” Malone said, highlighting that the currently available coronavirus vaccines have not been formally approved for use.
“This is a fundamental right having to do with clinical research ethics. And so, my concern is that I know that there are risks. But we don’t have access to the data and the data haven’t been captured rigorously enough so that we can accurately assess those risks – And therefore … we don’t really have the information that we need to make a reasonable decision,” he added.
He also said that the potential risk posed by the vaccines is larger than the benefits they can bring when it comes to younger people.
Malone also pointed to a lack of substantive risk-benefit analysis regarding the COVID-19 vaccines.
“That is one of my other objections, that we talk about these words risk-benefit analysis casually as if it is very deep science. It’s not. Normally at this stage, the CDC would have performed those risk-benefit analyses and they would be database and science-based. They are not right now,” he said.
“I can say that the risk-benefit ratio for those 18 and below doesn’t justify vaccines and there’s a pretty good chance that it doesn’t justify vaccination in these very young adults,” Malone added.
You can watch the interview here:
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