Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo’s latest diatribe against COVID-19 vaccines took on a religious bent Thursday when he told far-right podcast host Steve Bannon that the inoculations are the “Antichrist of all products.”

A day after the Ron DeSantis appointee called for the end of mRNA vaccines because he believed they could harm DNA—a claim that experts have debunked—Ladapo reiterated his baseless contentions to Bannon.

“I think it probably does have some integration at some levels with the human genome,” Ladapo said on the War Room podcast, “because these vaccines are honestly—they’re the Antichrist of all products. So I think it probably does. But I’m not saying it does.”

  • ramble81@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Isn’t this guy supposed to have a valid medical degree? I’m a layman and understand how mRNA vaccines work. How can he be so wildly off? Does he understand and not care or is truly stupid?

    • Candelestine@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      It’s actually not that complicated.

      Just to illustrate, let’s look at a single facet of Iranian society under their religious totalitarians. They frequently want our technology, but they don’t want the creativity that actually creates it, because this liberal creative mindset would inevitably undermine their authority.

      Any conservative individual can adopt this conformist style, where they go ahead and absorb “what” and “how” but are far more leery of “why” questions, simply loyally parroting what they think others want them to say while not actually internalizing the lesson material.

      So, their education ends up partial. They can still become a doctor though, all that takes is a whole shitload of hard work and some intelligence.

      There’s always going to be some.

      • Telorand@reddthat.com
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        10 months ago

        And in fact, it turns out that being a charlatan can be quite lucrative, probably orders of magnitude more than he makes as a doctor.