I been hearing the radio commercials promoting comirnaty now. I thought it was another year or 2 before it was available here?
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Some attorney should file a nice lawsuit.
I saw commercials urging people to take the "Comirnaty" vax as well and saying it is available. That is "bait and switch"... or at worst it's an advertising LIE.
Comirnaty is NOT available. If you go in and ask for the Comirnaty vax, a pharmacy, clinic, doctor's office, hospital, etc... will inject you with Pfizer's experimental vax instead.
If an attorney hires about 3 or 4 people to go into a clinic or pharmacy and request Comirnaty (as seen on TV)... and they pull out a vial of Pfizer experimental vax instead... they should record the transaction and get video if possible, then leave.
Lawsuit can be filed based on 3 or 4 instances of requesting one advertised product, but being intentionally given a different product even though the "FDA approved" name brand was requested. That would be systemic fraud.
That's one way someone could make a few $Million in lawsuits.
I commercials I hear say "while shopping you can check off one of your items by visiting the Pharmacist and ask about getting the FDA approved Comrinaty covid 19 vaccine. Talk to a pharmacist today to learn about more options."
I think they wouldn't lose in a lawsuit because all they specifically saw to talk to them to find out the options. The commercial leaves out the fact Comrinaty isn't available but does mention there are more options besides the FDA approved one.
I agree. Get pissed off every time I hear it. But it's marketing. Like cereal commercials for example. That has almost no nutrition value and loaded with sugar. They say it's part of a balanced breakfast. The rest of the breakfast includes milk, orange juice, eggs, ect. It allows the average person believe it's healthy for you.
This concept is what I'm following relatively closely for now
As far as I know, the Army can't order you to take an EUA drug. In a couple months, they're going to 'have pfizer shot available' and order our unit (nat'l guard) to take them. That would make this not a lawful order, again unless I'm missing something.
I'd really like to see this concept/issue expanded upon, I'm not sure how its not more in the forefront on our forums. Shouldn't this be the current delay tactic / way out for service members? Obviously not a permanent solution, but can certainly buy some time, as much as I don't want to validate the whole 'but now its FDA approved' thing.