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Saturday, August 27, 2022

Jewjabber suing Jewjabber over money,

but we can't convict either one for genocide!





I've focused on Pfizer because it's the deadliest, and most obvious, Jewjab, but Moderna is also a Jewjab.

Israeli who led Moderna vaccine effort explains road to success

For Israeli native and Moderna Chief Medical Officer Tal Zaks, the road to a COVID-19 vaccine came with some challenges. An unexpected one was a tense encounter with none other than Dr. Anthony Fauci last June.

“In my anxiety to get this done, the Israeli in me showed up,” Zaks quipped during a virtual conversation sponsored by the Vilna Shul April 15. “I was just bloody impatient.” Zaks recalled that he subsequently apologized to Fauci and said, “Let’s figure out how to move forward.”

That’s exactly what happened. Last November, Cambridge-based Moderna released preliminary data from its Phase 3 trial, showing that its vaccine had a more than 94 percent effectiveness rate. The FDA granted emergency-use authorization, as well as to a vaccine developed by Pfizer-BioNTech, with both using a new technology based on messenger RNA, or mRNA. Today, these vaccines continue to be used to combat the coronavirus.

“What we see in Phase 3 is bearing fruit,” Zaks said, referring to both the Moderna and Pfizer trials. “It’s holding up in real-world efficacy, swiftly making an impact.”

Zaks grew up in Israel and received a medical degree and doctorate from Ben-Gurion University. Originally trained as an oncologist, he has been working for Moderna since 2015, with previous experience at the National Institutes of Health (as a post-doc), GlaxoSmithKline, and Sanofi. Today, he lives in Newton with his wife, Meirav, who he said played a crucial role in helping him take a much-needed rest last year.

“I think it was the first phase, we were all just scrambling,” Zaks recalled. “There was no day, no night, no weekend, just a constant project. At some point, my wife said, ‘This can’t go on, honey.’” As a result, on Saturdays “I had to stop work. Not because of religion – forgive me, those [who are] better than me at that – but because I stopped working Saturday, Saturday evening. It allowed me some perspective.”

In a discussion moderated by the Vilna Shul’s Jason Weiner, Zaks shared his perspective on multiple issues, from the technology of the Moderna vaccine to its development over the past year to its ongoing rollout and the distribution in Israel, which has received 10 million doses from Moderna.

As Zaks explained, even before COVID-19, Moderna had been working with mRNA as a possible tool against infectious diseases – including in a collaboration with the FDA.

[...] 



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Thank you, Tal Zaks, for working that hard to save lives.
Thank you LD for posting this, kudos.
tt