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Bill Gates says he’s shocked by ‘crazy and evil’ conspiracy theories linking him to COVID-19 | Daily Mail Online

May 29, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Bill Gates says he has been taken aback by the volume of ‘crazy’ and ‘evil’ conspiracy theories that have been spreading about him on social media since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Microsoft co-founder turned philanthropist said he has been the subject of millions of online posts and ‘crazy conspiracy theories’, and insists he would like to get to the bottom of what’s behind them.

The wild theories involving Gates, whose foundation has donated over a billion to coronavirus vaccine and treatment research, include unfounded claims he developed COVID-19 in a lab and wants to use the vaccine to implant microchip tracking devices into billions of people.

Another leading public figure in the fight against the pandemic, Dr. Anthony Fauci, has also become a target of several conspiracies, including claims he created the virus and is now blocking natural cures for it.

‘Nobody would have predicted that I and Dr. Fauci would be so prominent in these really evil theories,’ Gates told Reuters Wednesday.

‘I’m very surprised by that. I hope it goes away.’

Bill Gates says he has been taken aback by the volume of ‘crazy’ and ‘evil’ conspiracy theories that have been spreading about him on social media during the COVID-19 pandemic

Health professionals say vaccine misinformation could have lethal consequences if it leads people to opt for bogus cures instead

Gates, a billionaire who stepped down as chairman of Microsoft Corp in 2014, has through his philanthropic Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation committed at least $1.75 billion to the global response to the COVID-19.

Since the pandemic began a year ago,conspiracies have spread over the internet, fueling misinformation about the coronavirus, its origins and the motives of those working to fight it.

In the first few months of the pandemic alone, between February and April last year, conspiracy theories and misinformation linking Gates to the origins of COVID-19 were mentioned more than 1.2 million times on television and social media, according to a New York Times study.

Then, in May 2020, a Yahoo News/You Gov poll found that 28 percent of US adults believed that Gates was plotting to use a potential vaccine to implant microchips into billions of people to track their movements.

Meanwhile, other conspiracies gathered momentum that included claims Gates was seeking to cull 15 percent of the population with the vaccine, and he was also falsely quoted as saying the vaccine would ‘no doubt’ kill 700,000 people.

At Trump rallies, anti-lockdown protests, and Q-Anon drives, countless participants have been observed holding signs supporting the Gates conspiracies, that often include the tagline ‘#SayNoToBillGates’.

The genesis of the distorted theories is believed to date back to a 2015 video, when, during a TED Talk in Vancouver, Gates issued a dire warning that, ‘if anything kills over 10 million people over the next few decades, it is likely to be a highly infectious virus, rather than a war.’

Conspiracy theorists claim the premonition is proof that Gates had prior knowledge about the coronavirus.

During his Wednesday interview with Reuters, Gates asked: ‘But do people really believe that stuff?

‘We’re really going to have to get educated about this over the next year and understand… how does it change peoples’ behavior and how should we have minimized this?’

In the first few months of the pandemic alone, between February and April last year, conspiracy theories and misinformation linking Gates to the origins of COVID-19 were mentioned more than 1.2 million times 

During his Wednesday interview with Reuters, Gates asked: ‘But do people really believe that stuff?’

What Are Some of the Bill Gates Conspiracy Theories?

The main conspiracy theory involving Gates is that he intends to use the COVID-19 vaccine to implant a microchip into the arms of billions of people to track their movements.

A theory that Gates wanted to cull 15 percent of the population through the vaccine has also been peddled, as have false claims that he developed the deadly virus in a lab.

Other baseless theories include:

Gates offered a similar bemusement to the conspiracies during a key-note address at the World Congress of Science & Factual Producers in December.

‘I’m surprised at all the conspiracy theories — people who think the vaccine is not meant to save lives. That’s all wrong, but the scale of it is a bit scary in terms of, will that prevent people from being willing to take the vaccine, and why are they looking for these simple explanations?’

Gates said the goal of his foundation’s vaccine development work is to advance public goods for global health through technological innovation by accelerating the development and commercialization of novel vaccines and the sustainable manufacture of existing ones.

‘Even [U.S. coronavirus expert] Dr. Fauci or myself, our basic motivation for being involved in this work has been questioned; maybe there’s something malign about that,’ Gates said. ‘I’m hopeful that the digital tools can get the truth out, as well as it’s gotten these conspiracy theories out.’

Bill Gates, who is America’s biggest owner of private farmland, is among the world’s richest people, with only Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Amazon’s Jeff Bezos boasting deeper pockets.

Prof Joseph Uscinski, a political scientist at the University of Miami and author of books on conspiracy theories, told the BBC last year said Gates has become a ‘voodoo doll’ of conspiracies simply because he is rich and famous.

‘Conspiracy theories are about accusing powerful people of doing terrible things,’ he said. ‘The theories are basically the same, just the names change.

‘Before Bill Gates, it was George Soros and the Koch brothers and the Rothchilds and the Rockefellers.’

Gates, a billionaire who stepped down as chairman of Microsoft Corp in 2014, has through his philanthropic Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation committed at least $1.75 billion to the global response to the COVID-19

At Trump rallies, anti-lockdown protests, and Q-Anon drives, countless participants have been observed holding signs supporting the Gates conspiracies, that often read ‘#SayNoToBillGates’ 

While Uscinski says the majority of conspiracy theories ‘die on the vine’, the ones that endure are those that offer ‘big villains and address issues that people care about’.

‘It should come as no surprise that rich people and big corporations are being accused of conspiring to put chips in our necks because that is a thing we fear,’ he said. ‘This has been the ammo of conspiracy theories for a long, long time.’

The rise of social media has also helped to propel theories such as the ones involving Gates into the public sphere.

‘Before the internet, they were self-contained and existed only in their own echo chambers or bubbles within certain communities, but the internet allows them to travel across political lines, between communities, so I think there is much more scope to mainstream conspiracy theories than before the internet,’ Rory Smith, from fact-checkers First Draft News, also told the BBC.

He added that conspiracy theories have particularly flourished amid the pandemic because people are more ‘psychologically vulnerable.’

‘This crisis is unprecedented in size and scope and the advice shifts as new studies are published. There are large areas of uncertainty and humans abhor uncertainty,’ Smith said.

‘We grab onto any information to inject some sort of sense and order and that is when the rumor mill starts. Conspiracy theories – and notably Bill Gates conspiracy theories – fill these informational vacuums.’

The rise of social media has also helped to propel theories such as the ones involving Gates into the public sphere, as people are said to be more ‘psychologically vulnerable’

Looking ahead, Gates praised Dr. Fauci and Francis Collins, head of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, as ‘smart’ and ‘wonderful people’ to Reuters on Wednesday.

Gates said he’s looking forward to seeing them be able to work effectively and speak the truth under the new administration of Joe Biden.

During former President Donald Trump’s handling of the pandemic, Gates said, it had ‘sometimes felt like they were the only sane people in the U.S. government.’

‘I’m excited about the team that Biden has picked’ to tackle the health crisis, Gates said.

Gates said he was also pleased that under Biden, the United States has rejoined the World Health Organization, and ‘that he’s appointed smart people, and the fact that Dr. Fauci won’t be suppressed.’

Filed Under: Articles - World

Dan Scavino shares HILARIOUS Gif of Donald Trump taking over the Oscars on Chuck Schumer’s TV – twitchy.com

May 29, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Dan Scavino shares HILARIOUS Gif of Donald Trump taking over the Oscars on Chuck Schumer’s TV

Posted at 9:15 am on April 27, 2021 by Greg P.

Filed Under: Articles - World

Afternoon Funny Meme Dump 34 Pics

May 28, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

Filed Under: Articles - World

‘SNL’ perfectly depicts the crazy holiday cards we receive

May 28, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

‘Saturday Night Live’ had some hilarious moments last night as host and musical guest Billie Eilish joined the cast to poke fun at the holiday season. In one standout sketch, the cast banded together to portray the reality of the holiday cards we all receive each year.

In the hilarious sketch, Alex Moffat arrives home, where his wife, played by Melissa Villaseñor, shows him all the cards she’s displayed on the fridge.

“I put all our Christmas cards on the fridge,” she says. “Looks festive, right?” As the husband remarks that they got a lot of cards and know a lot of people, the first card comes alive.

“People like me, your super white, super Christian neighbor here on the beach with my wife and army of blond children,” says the man on the card, played by Mikey Day, in a picture where both adults and more than half a dozen children are dressed in matching white shirts and jeans.

“And yes, this is the seventh Christmas card in a row I’ve been pregnant,” says the wife, played by Chloe Fineman. “I’m never not pregnant.”

In the next card, we see Heidi Gardner, playing an overenthusiastic and oversharing cousin, also showing off a baby bump. She and her husband are wearing chef hats and holding a sign that reads “bun in the oven.”

“I started planning this Christmas card as I was peeing on the pregnancy test,” she jokes.

Other hilarious cards include ones from their mom’s mysterious and maybe-widowed friend, a postcard from the local dentist saying they are two years past due for their six-month checkup and one from Pierce and Leonard, the “well-off middle-aged gay couple your wife is friends with.”

“As usual, we’re dressed to the nines and holding our gross, old little dog that you cannot believe is still alive,” says Bowen Yang as one half of the couple. The shaking little dog is, of course, dressed in a Christmas sweater.

When the husband asks how the “rat dog” is still alive, Kenan Thompson explains it’s due to hundreds of thousands of dollars in medical procedures.

Another highlight features cast member Punkie Johnson in a card with Miley Cyrus, making a surprise cameo the sketch.

“What better way to remind you that I met a celebrity at a restaurant 11 months ago than with my Christmas card,” Johnson says as she poses with the singer.

Billie Eilish takes a turn playing Harper, a frenemy from high school. She, her “cheating” and “boring” husband and “incel” son all pose together in their pajamas for the card.

“If our matching pajamas don’t make you hate us, flip the card for a long braggy list of what we did this year,” she says with a smile.

It’s not the only “SNL” sketch to skewer a holiday tradition. One bit, starring Kate McKinnon and Eilish, pokes fun at the “lonely, widowed neighbor” trope, while another takes on local Christmas pageants. McKinnon also brought back her Anthony Fauci impression for a hilarious sketch about COVID-19 and Christmas.

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Filed Under: Articles - World

Friday’s Top 35 Funny Twitter Quotes

May 28, 2022 by humorouz Leave a Comment

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