Louis Farrakhan, the leader of the Nation of Islam, called the coronavirus shot a "vial of death" at an event held this weekend, and falsely claimed that the vaccine has killed people. Videos of the event are found on the Nation of Islam's Facebook and Twitter accounts. Both social media sites have recently developed policies to combat vaccine-related misinformation. Farrakhan chided black celebrities who have promoted the vaccine, saying that they were 'being bought and paid for' by the government and aid in the 'destruction of your people.' Louis Farrakhan, the influential leader of the Nation of Islam, continued his crusade against the coronavirus vaccines over the weekend, calling the vaccine a "vial of death" during remarks at the extremist group's convention, where other speakers falsely claimed that the vaccines have caused more than 900 deaths. Videos of the convention, which was held for the Nation of Islam's annual Saviours' Day, are posted on the group's Twitter, Facebook and YouTube pages, despite the social media companies' policies against vaccine-related misinformation. "By rushing so fast to get something out, bypassing normal steps in a true vaccine, now God is going to turn your vaccine into death in a hurry," Farrakhan said… Read full this story
- Chinese diplomat promotes conspiracy theory that US military brought coronavirus to Wuhan
- The Rise and Spread of a 5G Coronavirus Conspiracy Theory
- Senior British academics share coronavirus conspiracy theories online - including speculation it was a biological weapon
- Nearly 30 percent of Americans believe conspiracy theory that coronavirus was created in a lab - with Republicans twice as likely to believe the myth than Democrats, new poll shows
- Coronavirus pandemic | How a conspiracy theory fueled arson and harassment in Britain
- Government to meet with social media giants to tackle 'crazed conspiracy theory' that 5G causes coronavirus following a spate of arson attacks on mobile masts
- YouTube clamps down on conspiracy theory vidoes linking 5G to Covid-19 following live interview
- John Cusack tweets and deletes coronavirus conspiracy theory about the dangers of 5G networks
- Fake ‘5G caused coronavirus’ conspiracy theory claims PROOF is on Britain’s £20 note
- London Live prompts inquiry after showing virus conspiracy theories
‘Vial Of Death’: Louis Farrakhan Pushes Vaccine Conspiracy Theories In Videos Posted On Facebook, Twitter have 368 words, post on dailycaller.com at March 3, 2021. This is cached page on CuBird. If you want remove this page, please contact us.