pizzathyme 18 hours ago

I can understand the current global/political environment against mRNA accounting for a 90% fall in revenues and valuation. But if the mRNA tech is still progressing and promising for a variety of ailments like cancer, then the company still has substantial future value coming

  • dmschulman 18 hours ago

    The business model for pharma and drug discovery is unfortunately one that requires a lot of upfront investment for research and trials that may or may not pay off as revenue one day.

    The technology they invented is incredibly promising for new vaccines and they should be attracting enough investment (through contracts or other deals) to continue innovating and saving lives. Maybe they can license it as a last ditch effort to build revenue, but unfortunately the public perceptions about vaccine efficacy is on the wane and government contracts are no longer there to support this vital work both in the present and as a hedge against future pandemics.

    • dfsegoat 17 hours ago

      To put some numbers to trying to develop a single therapy (where candidates etc. will fail as you try them)

      - Plan to sink $180-500M+ just in R&D

      - Factor in failures, regulatory, clinical, recruitment, phase 1/2 trials and you arrive very quickly around $1.3-2.1 BILLION USD per therapy approved.

      ...there is a 90% chance that you will spend that $1B+ - and it will fail completely.

      https://www.nature.com/articles/d41573-020-00043-x

      https://greenfieldchemical.com/2023/08/10/the-staggering-cos...

      • Eddy_Viscosity2 16 hours ago

        $180-500M+, doesn't sound that much really. You can barely get a decent ballroom for that.

        • disqard 13 hours ago

          That's ballroom + bunker, you prole

      • mycall 16 hours ago

        According to your numbers, Moderna got lucky at a 10% chance of producing the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in 48 hours of computation? I don't know, but there seems to be more factors at play.

        https://www.nanowerk.com/spotlight/spotid=57148.php

        • bluGill 16 hours ago

          Moderna got lucky in that we know enough about that virus that the chance of a COVID-19 vaccine was a lot more than 10%. The more general case of a drug is a lot more than specific one

        • OutOfHere 14 hours ago

          Didn't Fauci give Moderna the code for the gain-of-function modification for the research done in Wuhan before Covid, matching what was seen in Covid?

          Messenger RNA technology has a future, but I don't see why it belongs to Moderna. There are many players in the game.

    • lumost 17 hours ago

      It's tough to get people to want a vaccine which knocks you off your feet for 3 days and needs to be repeated every 6-12 months. I'm very bullish on mRNA vaccine technology - but it's potentially a poor fit for rapidly changing viruses.

      • DanHulton 17 hours ago

        That sucks if that's your experience, but it's not the universal, or even the common, experience.

        For reference, I get a sore-ish shoulder the next day, and that's it. Also for reference, when I got Actual Covid, I was knocked on my ass for almost two weeks. So for me, at least, the choice is easy.

        • laughing_man 16 hours ago

          That was my experience. A bit of tenderness at the injection site, the same thing I get from a flu shot.

        • lumost 17 hours ago

          It's my unfortunate experience, when I've had covid its a 6-12 hour affair that happens once every 12-24 months. My 3rd vaccine shot had me in bed for 3 days. Leading to continued vaccination being unsustainable. My wife has a similar experience to yours, and gets moderate to severe covid. She gets the vaccine every year to help avoid it - but still gets moderate COVID roughly once per 6 months.

          It's unfortunate that the vaccine has such radically different outcomes within a single household, if it was a flu shot like experience I'd happily get it once per year.

          • rsingel 17 hours ago

            COVID is a nasty virus. I need my brain way to much to FAFO.

            COVID-19 may Enduringly Impact Cognitive Performance and Brain Haemodynamics in Undergraduate Students - ScienceDirect https://share.google/49ER4VjJUwipGotZO

          • toast0 17 hours ago

            > it was a flu shot like experience

            Flu shot experience varies too. The last several have been very low response, but the first few were a miserable couple days and I stopped getting them because certain misery was worse than a chance of misery that I'd never know if it was flu or not, because testing was inaccessible.

            • soco 16 hours ago

              Last year I skipped the flu vac (I had a zillion for tropical diseases so I though come one not another one) and lo, I got a flu about every 4 weeks, so like over 6 the whole season. I'm on a way to get it this year.

          • rpdillon 16 hours ago

            Wait, you're saying that when you got COVID, it lasted six hours?

            • lumost 16 hours ago

              At least testably/symptomatically, I'm asthmatic as well - so it's surprising that the impact is so small. My wife gets it for 1-2 weeks whenever she comes down with it.

          • xjlin0 17 hours ago

            at least the vaccine greatly reduce the severe conditions such as death.

        • silisili 17 hours ago

          As a data point, my experience with the shot was a sore arm and chills for a couple days.

          When I got Covid later, it was slightly worse chills for 3 days. By the 4th time I got Covid, it was just chills for a day.

          If I knew that would be the experience, I'd probably have skipped it. That said, it's completely possible it was having the vaccine that made getting real Covid not so bad.

          • lemontheme 16 hours ago

            By the time it was my turn to get Covid I’d been twice vaccinated. It’s the most exhausted I can remember ever feeling. Let me tell you, the whole time I kept thinking: How much more miserable would this have been without the vaccine to blunt the impact? Felt grateful and humbled

          • jghn 17 hours ago

            you're also ignoring the long term damage that COVID appears to do

            • silisili 17 hours ago

              In what way? I made no claims about that, curious what you're alluding to.

              • jghn 16 hours ago

                You said: "When I got Covid later, it was slightly worse chills for 3 days. By the 4th time I got Covid, it was just chills for a day. If I knew that would be the experience, I'd probably have skipped it."

                I'm saying that's not an apples to apples comparison due to the growing evidence of how much long term damage a COVID infection can cause.

                • silisili 16 hours ago

                  Ah I see, thanks. Yep, it's definitely not apples to apples in either event. As in, not having the vaccine could have made getting it, at least the first time, way way worse to deal with.

          • altcognito 16 hours ago

            Wait, you got the Covid vaccine, it reduced your symptoms, and your conclusion was "I should have skipped it?"

            • silisili 16 hours ago

              That's not how I intended to frame it. I don't regret the vaccine or anything. And my last sentence admitted that was probably the case.

      • mattmaroon 17 hours ago

        If you mean covid, most people aren’t knocked off their feet at all. If you mean cancer, that’s a dream compared to chemo.

        • kerabatsos 17 hours ago

          Is this a serious comment? Covid killed over a million people in the United States alone.

          • mattmaroon 17 hours ago

            Reread it until you understand that we were talking about the vaccine not the disease

          • paganel 17 hours ago

            That was the initial shock, we're all better now, with or without the vaccine.

      • gdulli 17 hours ago

        It has affected me for at most 16 hours. I have never heard 3 days, though I'm sure there are some rare outliers. And, not being at high risk, I don't "need" it more than once a year. This kind of exaggeration is one of the things that doesn't help public opinion. Especially when there are people actively looking for ways to subvert it.

      • rpdillon 16 hours ago

        Reactions vary. I got a COVID shot on Friday. I had to massage my arm a little bit Saturday, but nothing more incovenient than that.

      • dmschulman 17 hours ago

        People have varying immune responses to getting vaccines, but feeling crummy after getting a flu shot has nothing to do with whether the vaccine used mRNA technology or not.

        I would say people who end up bedridden for 3 days are in the minority for most vaccines immune responses, but people also need to make peace with the idea that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

    • deltarholamda 17 hours ago

      Quite a lot of the low-hanging fruit from pharma has already been picked. The modern business model for pharma involves coming up with a patentable new drug that does the same thing as an older drug that's now out of patent and available for manufacture as a generic.

      Making pharmaceuticals subservient to the whimsy of the stock market is a bad idea. It introduces incentive distortions where none should be.

jleyank 17 hours ago

Too many people would rather risk suffering the disease than take the vaccine. These might be the same people criticizing pharma for alleviating symptoms rather than providing cures. mRNA is an interesting means of delivering molecules on-site without mucking about with the body’s general systems. But the ‘Net says drugs are bad so they have funding problems.

Hope such people reconsider their stance when the threat level is high enough. Err, threat to them and theirs as the threat to others isn’t high enough by definition.

  • falcor84 17 hours ago

    > Too many people would rather risk suffering the disease than take the vaccine.

    Apologies for being morbid, but that's what we call a self-fixing problem, isn't it? On a Darwinistic level, people either adopt an effective threat assessment approach or they die.

    EDIT: Following up on some of the comments, note that I didn't actually say whether vaccine deniers do or do not have an effective threat assessment approach - I don't know. While I personally do believe in the effectiveness of vaccines, I definitely am not qualified to be making risk decisions for other people, and it's important for me to say this, because I don't want other people to make decisions for me. For example, I don't want others to tell me to not do extreme sports, or not to go out to the wilderness, or not to drink alcohol, etc, regardless of whether society feels that this increases my health risks. I strongly believe that a core part of being free is being able to make these decisions for oneself. I agree that we should have some way of preventing harm to others, but it can't be something that comes at the cost of removing people's bodily autonomy (or even just denigrating people for choosing differently).

    • teamonkey 16 hours ago

      Unfortunately, one of the key purposes of the vaccine - arguably more important than personal immunity - is reducing the chance of it propagating to other people, and reducing the intensity of the viral load if it does.

    • esalman 12 hours ago

      If you attend a graduate level CS course on network science, you'll come across network model of herd immunity and mathematical proof of why it is effective. People who developed the model didn't take first amendment into consideration. Otherwise the outcome might have been different.

      • falcor84 12 hours ago

        What does this have to do with anything? Obviously science should be independent from these considerations, but then social policy should not be.

        As an extreme example, give me a free weekend and I'll get you a mathematical model of how if we force everyone who ever committed a physically aggressive act to go on beta blockers, then we'll significantly reduce violent crime. But having the math worked out doesn't immediately imply that that's what we should do.

        • esalman 12 hours ago

          Well the reason herd model does not take first amendment into account is because it wasn't developed by Americans, for a start. My comment was meant to be sarcastic.

    • jleyank 17 hours ago

      Hence my statement about hope…

    • seized 17 hours ago

      Not really, those people go to a hospital where there is a duty of care. Hospitals don't get to just say "Nah, not gonna help you" and close the door for people showing up in the ED.

      So those vaccine deniers get sick, lose their commitment, go to the ED, get some level of treatment/help/etc, and suck up resources and impact help for the guy who got vaccinated then got hit by someone running a red light....

      • soco 16 hours ago

        Also, they will help spread the disease around, chances to hit some less fortunate chaps increasing with every new carrier.

    • Gibbon1 17 hours ago

      I made a comment that got downvoted and flagged and then dang sent me a nasty gram.

      "Chinese bat flu. Deadly enough to be a problem. Not deadly enough to be a solution"

      Which is to say it's a real problem. The flu is a real problem, ask any nurse that works in a hospital. With vaccines Covid is 3X worse. But that's not enough carnage to break through most peoples normalcy bias. No ones getting enlightened, instead they'll get angry and lash out.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Normalcy_bias

tsoukase 10 hours ago

Moderna's covid vaccine was a state-of-the-art, low side effect one that I was jealous of. I had taken the almost same one of Prizer without problem. They made a miracle in just months while the regular vaccines have a decade long pipeline.

But a drug company has to produce new products if she wants to survive. m-RNA tech, although promising in theory and the beginning, couldn't produce a life saving block buster product and now the parent company might die or be buyed out.

Projectiboga 17 hours ago

A type of Karma hitting them. U Pitt Medical Center had a ready to trial covid vaccine based on super sharp glucose spikes coated with some spike protein. Decent results in lab animals, ready for a human trial. Moderna bought it out by paying off UpittMC to sideline that and become a major testing partner for their mRNA product. Even if it is a legitimate advance the bullying of the media to down focus more tradational products and pulling a new tech from reaching testing is limiting our scientiffic discovery. They pushed the mRNA technology as their lawyers must have felt there were more legal and regulatory barriers to competition to give them a longer profit runway.

ericmcer 16 hours ago

What is this article?

"Why is a company whose entire valuation was based on covid-19 vaccine sales struggling now???"

Mysterious!

  • christophilus 14 hours ago

    Yeah. My thoughts exactly. Its valuation is back to pre pandemic levels which seems reasonable.

SilverElfin 17 hours ago

Bad timing. Their stock is up 15% today.

pronouncedjerry 14 hours ago

can i bypass the paywall and pay just for this one article?

cynicalsecurity 17 hours ago

[flagged]

  • bena 17 hours ago

    We have roughly 8 billion people on Earth. We have enough that we can probably do more than one thing at a time.

Wasa_bi 17 hours ago

Why is there a constant need to justify why vaccines, vaccine research, and anything related to them are inherently a good thing to skeptics but we're also supposed to believe that AI and the major companies proping it up is the future with no scrutiny?

  • AnimalMuppet 16 hours ago

    HN is not one person. It is not even one cohesive "we". Here you find people who are AI believers, and AI skeptics. And you find people who are vaccine believers, and vaccine skeptics.

    And if you think that HN believes that AI is the future with no scrutiny, you haven't been paying attention.

  • monero-xmr 16 hours ago

    I'm not a "vaccine skeptic" per se but the fact a novel mechanism for vaccines was hand-waived through the FDA, and essentially forced on everyone in society, is something that has not been scrutinized enough

    • conception 16 hours ago

      If by hand waved you mean gone through the same clinical trials and rigor as any approved approach.

      • monero-xmr 16 hours ago

        Except for years of follow-up studies to determine longer term effects, which certainly would have been applied for a novel vaccine, before forcing all of society to use it. Of course you could be fired from your job and be banned from public spaces (except in Florida) instead of taking it, but essentially you had to if you wanted to function in society.

        I will keep my laminated "Proof of Vaccination" card for life so we don't forget, wasn't allowed anywhere without it (except Black Lives Matter riots)

        • soco 16 hours ago

          Oh well, in the meantime a few years have gone by and the studies are here. Do we really need to repeat the same arguments of 5 years ago?

          • monero-xmr 16 hours ago

            It was a major reason for the collapse in trust of institutions, and then the election of Trump 2.0. But why rehash the past emirite?

            • teamonkey 15 hours ago

              So you’re saying that something done on Trump’s watch led to such distrust that people elected Trump again?

              • kcplate 14 hours ago

                I’d suggest that because the implementation didn't happen on Trump’s watch and the vaccine hard sell, mandates, “stretching” of the truth of efficacy during that period was the primary contributors to much of the distrust, it’s definitely helped contribute to his reelection.

                There is certainly no way to know how Trump would have handled that implementation, but we do know how the Biden administration handled it.

                • teamonkey 13 hours ago

                  It’s true that Trump may well have rolled back the legislation he put in place, who knows?

                  Efficacy figures are bound to change once you go from a ‘small’ study (in this case hundreds of thousands) to a wider population. The original efficacy claims would have been truly astounding, and they ended up being only very good.

                  80% efficacy (which it ended up as) should be seen as a medical triumph, and certainly worthwhile in the context of a global pandemic.

                  • kcplate 12 hours ago

                    > original efficacy claims would have been truly astounding

                    That’s the problem, the bar was set too high. Things were said like “get the vaccine and you won’t get Covid”, “you won’t be able to spread it if you do get it”, and “you will have a milder case if you do get it”. In short order people realized all of those things were exaggerated and not true. Erodes trust.

                    It was a huge miscalculation and damage was done.

                    • teamonkey 2 hours ago

                      > Things were said like “get the vaccine and you won’t get Covid”

                      Was this actually said, or did they say something like “much less likely to get Covid symptoms”?

                      Because the science never claimed 100% efficacy, at best they said 94%, which is quite a clear indication that some people would still get symptoms. The efficacy rates and R rates were all over the news at the time.

                      > “you won’t be able to spread it if you do get it”

                      Again an absolute that was never claimed by science. If you have milder symptoms it reduces the chance of spreading and reduces the viral load when it does. Even a small reduction in symptoms in the population will greatly help reduce the rate of the virus spreading.

                      > “you will have a milder case if you do get it”.

                      This part at least is correct.

                      There was a lot of confusion and bad science communication at the time, but the vaccines worked the same as vaccines always have. R rates and efficacy rates were talked about at length on mainstream and social media (what else did they have to talk about). The problem is that people heard only what they wanted to hear.

            • silverquiet 15 hours ago

              Given that the plan to accelerate covid vaccine development, "Operation Warp Speed", was a Trump administration program, this seems quite ironic.

    • laughing_man 16 hours ago

      They knew the vaccines had substantial side effects before they were released to the public. Those results were put under a 75 year gag order, at least in the US. I'm not sure "hand waving" is the right way to describe what happened, but they certainly could have been more honest with us.

      A public health authority's only coin is the extent to which the public finds it credible, and the US public health establishment may never recover from covid.

      • fch42 2 hours ago

        you really believe that were such a "gag order" to exist the current US government never mind its health secretary would have done an "Epstein" about that and upheld it?

        Truly alien. Completely beyond understanding.

reenorap 17 hours ago

mRNA vaccines are a fantastic technology that were completely oversold by politicians.

The politicians lied to our faces and twisted our arms through mandates and threatened us to believe what they told us, not what we were seeing with our own eyes. I don't think the reaction against mRNA vaccines would have been so strong if they didn't try to force us to take it or if they didn't wage a religious war against those that didn't want to take it.

But I still believe mRNA has a great future ahead of it. I have recently bought a large position (for me) in Moderna because I think it will be able to fulfill the promises that we were told it would.

  • tgv 17 hours ago

    What was the horrible lie you were forced to accept, as if O'Brien himself were telling you to?

    • reenorap 17 hours ago

      That the vaccines worked, that natural immunity against COVID didn't exist, that the vaccines were BETTER than natural immunity, etc.

      I'm fully vaccinated along with a booster. I was the first person outside of medical professionals that I know that got the COVID vaccine. I got COVID 3 weeks after my booster which is when I was supposed to be the most protected. That's when I came to the conclusion that we were lied to.

      My kid got COVID and then he was still forced to get the vaccine because the school district/state forced it. That's because they refused to believe that natural immunity existed or that somehow the vaccine was magically better than natural immunity. This also made me realize how religious this has become because now even the scientists were anti-science.

      It took years for them to relent and those several years of religious and anti-science beliefs from scientists and politicians destroyed the trust that people had in them.

      • fabian2k 17 hours ago

        Vaccine-induced immunity is better because it comes with drastically lower chances of serious illness or death than the actual infection.

        There were plenty of studies comparing immunity through infection and vaccination pretty early on. One interesting aspect initially was that it looked like the combination of vaccination and infection was particularly effective. The infection acted like a booster.

        I'm not familiar with the exact handling of this in the US, but in general it is difficult to count infection as a replacment for vaccination. There is likely much more variability there, there was less data about this available and the simple tests for COVID are not that reliable. Not impossible, but far more complex than requiring vaccination.

        • reenorap 17 hours ago

          The point is that mandates forcing people, like my son, who already had COVID to take the vaccine were absolutely wrong. And it also exposed him to the possibility of getting myocarditis from the vaccine, which is openly a risk talked about by the CDC now but was denied before.

          Natural immunity has been proven time and time again to be much more longer lasting and more effective than vaccination. Once you had COVID, there is no reason whatsoever to force people to get vaccinated. That is simply anti-science.

          • xjlin0 17 hours ago

            The point is the COVID you son had and the vaccine are different strains

            • reenorap 16 hours ago

              Yes, exactly. There was no point in getting vaccinated with that vaccine.

      • Klonoar 17 hours ago

        The vaccine never stopped you from getting COVID, it just gave you a better response when you got it.

        I do not understand why this doesn’t click with people.

        • zucked 17 hours ago

          This was one of my (as a layperson) irritations with this process. Words matter -- the fact that this was rolled out as a "vaccine" gave a lot of people the initial impression that once they got the shot, they'd be immune. Myself included.

          I believe that the word vaccine was misunderstood on a large scale, much to our detriment. I don't know what it should have been called otherwise, but I think the messaging around the mRNA treatments was handled poorly.

          • toast0 17 hours ago

            > Words matter -- the fact that this was rolled out as a "vaccine" gave a lot of people the initial impression that once they got the shot, they'd be immune.

            If you're going to be upset about word choice, the thing to be upset about is that it has no connection to cows at all.

            No vaccine grants 100% immunity. Some are more effective than others. It's hard to predict efficacy for a novel type of vaccination for a novel virus and there's no vaccines for other viruses in the same family.

            Certainly, this could have been communicated better, but it's not like flu vaccines have 100% efficacy either and they've been around for decades.

          • reenorap 17 hours ago

            It is/was a vaccine, I think the terminology is correct. It just didn't work effectively because the variants mutated too quickly because you're not supposed to vaccinate in the middle of a pandemic. This cause an explosion of variants and they couldn't make vaccines that tracked the new variants fast enough.

            So instead they decided to change the goalposts and said "This vaccine that worked on the variant 2 years ago will still protect from severe symptoms" when in fact it did nothing and people kept getting infected.

            It wasn't the vaccine itself it was how it was sold to us by Pfizer, Moderna and the politicians.

          • jghn 17 hours ago

            If we're going to go by this, literally every vaccine should stop being called a vaccine. That's not the right answer. The right answer is to not have a population of ignorant people.

            • zucked 16 hours ago

              That can be a noble goal, but I wouldn't be so hand-wavy about how people understand words and their meanings. I'm firmly in the camp that the mRNA covid vaccine was a wonder of modern science, and on the whole it had net positives for society. Don't misunderstand, it was not rolled out, or messaged perfectly and wasn't without risk that we're likely to wrap our arms around some day in the future.

              But we can learn from the experience. And in my view, telling a captive, emotional, and concerned audience "we have a vaccine!" and then not absolutely being a broken record about what that means was a miss.

              • jghn 13 hours ago

                My point was that there was absolutely nothing different about the covid vaccine in this regard from literally any other vaccine. So I'm not sure why you're putting it into a special bin here.

                If the point is that the average person is uneducated and doesn't understand how vaccines work, sure. But if the solution is to use a different word, that new word would need to be applied to every vaccine on the market. And what's the point if that's the case?

                Also, I don't recall ever hearing people with actual knowledge claiming it provided a cloak of invulnerability. So again, I'm not sure what those people should have done different. I'd agree that the media distorted scientific truths, but they always do that.

        • reenorap 17 hours ago

          This is false and has never been proven. This was the propaganda that was spread after the vaccine was openly no longer working.

          What stopped the pandemic was omicron that was so explosively contagious that 98+% of the world got it at the time. After that everyone had natural immunity that caused decreasing symptoms every subsequent time you got infected with a new variant.

          • frm88 37 minutes ago

            What stopped the pandemic was omicron that was so explosively contagious that 98+% of the world got it at the time. After that everyone had natural immunity that caused decreasing symptoms every subsequent time you got infected with a new variant.

            Source?

            There was a study in 2024 that researched what exactly lead to the sudden decline in Covid deaths [0]:

            ...suggest that a phase transition in the molecular structure of the COVID-19 spike protein made the virus less likely to cause severe infections.

            [0] https://www.springer.com/gp/about-springer/media/research-ne... click on the link directly to the study. It's a .pdf.

  • voidnap 17 hours ago

    Were very many forced to get mRNA? Even those under a vaccine mandate had the option for a non mRNA vaccine from J&J, right?

    • joshuamcginnis 17 hours ago

      J&J vaccine was eventually recalled and halted. By then, at least at the time I lived in Los Angeles, many employers and establishments flat out would not accept J&J vaccination proofs under the premise that because there were multiple boosters available for mRNA, it was no longer effective.

  • fabian2k 17 hours ago

    There certainly were stupid comments by politicians on this topic. But I don't think the vaccines were oversold, they did exactly what was claimed initially.

    That the virus would mutate this much was not something that scientists could have predicted at that point. I don't mean that it was entirely unexpected, but there simply wasn't any way to forecast how much it would mutate in advance.

    The updated vaccines against newer strains still did their job at preventing death and serious illness. But they couldn't prevent infection for the new strains.

    Some politicians and parts of the media were quite bad at handling the way the pandemic changed over time. But it was still easily possible to get good information about them.

    • reenorap 16 hours ago

      > That the virus would mutate this much was not something that scientists could have predicted at that point.

      The common scientific consensus has always been "Don't vaccinate in the middle of a pandemic" because it would cause more variants. This was one of the things they absolutely violated.

      > The updated vaccines against newer strains still did their job at preventing death and serious illness.

      No this is not true at all. Most deaths occurred after vaccinations rolled out.

  • mattmaroon 17 hours ago

    Eh, the political problems are also oversold. The original mRNA vaccines showed great efficacy and there was no way to know the virus would mutate so rapidly, or that in doing so it would dull the effectiveness, or that transmission rates weren’t significantly reduced by vaccination, or that the effects of the vaccine would diminish relatively rapidly, etc.

    It actually was plausible for a time that vaccines could create herd immunity and thus mass vaccination was highly desirable. You’re retconning today’s knowledge onto politicians of five years ago. Knowing what we know now about the vaccines, yeah, it was a bad move, but it was reasonable at the time.

  • colechristensen 17 hours ago

    All they had to do is be a little witholding and say that vaccines were prioritized for the very sick and very important people and maybe leak some important asshole in a private conversation saying it was a "good thing" that most people wouldn't be getting it. Just do what the French did to popularize potatoes... post guards on your potato fields and tell people they can't have them.

    Instead they took the line of "we know better than you and we're going to force you to do this".

    Democrats have a real problem with the "we know what's good for you" attitude.

    • deeg 16 hours ago

      The vaccine was developed under Warp Speed, a Trump program (one of the very few things I liked from Trump). It was first made available while Trump was still president. I have some empathy for people who think it was oversold but that wasn't solely a Democrat problem.

      • maxerickson 14 hours ago

        The vaccine was mostly developed before the pandemic and then was designed in a day or 2 after the virus was isolated and characterized. Then they started testing it for safety and effectiveness.

        Warp Speed was about being ready to make lots and lots of it once the testing was complete. It did a lot of good, but they probably should have spent more on it.

        • OkayPhysicist 13 hours ago

          How so? The US COVID vaccination response was nothing short of incredible. Even with the knuckledraggers spewing nonesense, the vaccine was ready and widely available in the United States incredibly quickly relative to most of the rest of the world. I had completed my vaccination series (as a in-good-health, 20-something) before my Canadian friends even had the opportunity.

          • maxerickson 11 hours ago

            It likely could have been a lot faster for relatively minimal cost.

            (Like double what we spent on it would still be relatively minimal and easily would have sped up wide availability in the US and around the world)

    • sgc 17 hours ago

      The next level up from the Democrats objectively horrible attitude is fascism, which we are currently attempting. I believe Americans have a strong cultural preference to be extreme bullies whenever they can get away with it. So often we are just execrable people who care nothing about others, at all.

      • reenorap 17 hours ago

        Americans have nothing on fascism compared to Europeans, especially what is going on in Britain right now.

t1234s 17 hours ago

Moderna looked more like a pump and dump

boxerab 17 hours ago

It certainly did not save the world. Because, as we now know, it did not prevent either infection or spread. All it did was expose people to risk such as elevated incidence of myocarditis, a fact even the manufacturer has acknowledged. For all you down-voters, can you provide an evidence-based rebuttal rather than a cowardly down vote ?

  • ffsm8 16 hours ago

    Fwiw, you didn't provide any evidence based claims anyone could make a rebuttal for.

    You just stated your own view as authority.

    • boxerab 15 hours ago

      That is an interesting point. The statement "the company that helped save the world" that I was responding to was stated without evidence. So, in the words of Christopher Hitchens, what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.

      IMHO, if someone disagrees with me, they can ask for evidence, and there is plenty. Downvoting makes my post less and less visible, suppressing my opinion, rather than debating it. That's why I think it is cowardly. Of course there is a place for suppression, for example for abusive posts or inciting violence. But here, I politely state my opinion, let people debate.