Anonymous ID: 3763f3 Sept. 20, 2021, 12:24 a.m. No.14621013   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

The Independent

@Independent

ยท

6m

A gunman has opened fire at a university in Perm, Siberia and there are deaths and people wounded, according to Russian media reports

Anonymous ID: 3763f3 Sept. 20, 2021, 12:31 a.m. No.14621043   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>1162

So how is locking down kids and forcing them to wear a mask a good plan?

 

Keeping people away from dying relatives.

 

Locked up for weeks

 

Cant travel

 

Lost my job

 

Great fucking plan Q.

 

Not

Anonymous ID: 3763f3 Sept. 20, 2021, 2:28 a.m. No.14621252   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

It was 17 days before Pfizer's first delivery deadline under its federal COVID-19 vaccine contract, and the company wasn't going to meet it, according to federal records and several people familiar with the matter.

 

Officials with Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration's multibillion-dollar push to make a COVID-19 vaccine available in record time, didn't know there was a problem.

 

Early on the morning of Nov. 10, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar was on the Today show talking to Savannah Guthrie about the "fruits of Operation Warp Speed and America's biopharmaceutical industry."

 

"Pfizer will be producing and delivering to us approximately 20 million doses of vaccine each month starting at the end of this month, in November," Azar told Guthrie.

 

But Pfizer was more than a month behind that schedule. It wouldn't finish delivering the doses projected to be due in its contract on Nov. 27 until mid-January, according to an NPR analysis of allocation data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and interviews with several people familiar with the matter.

 

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/08/25/1029715721/pfizer-vaccine-operation-warp-speed-delay