United states

US Senator Says COVID Vaccine ‘May Be True’ Causes AIDS

Johnson

U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson, a Republican from Wisconsin, responded to a man who claims that COVID vaccines cause people AIDS by telling him that “everything you say can be true.”

Johnson spoke with Todd Kalendar, who describes himself as an “international lawyer” and leader of a group trying to stop the Biden regime’s efforts to destroy the US military through injections of a so-called HIV vaccine. During a conversation between Calendar and Johnson on the right-wing video sharing platform Rumble, Calendar reiterated that the various vaccines against COVID give users AIDS and that health professionals should be “held accountable.”

“You have more than a hundred doctors here, all of whom will tell you that these injections have caused vaccine-induced AIDS,” Calendar said, although no reputable doctor has made such a claim. “They purposefully gave people AIDS … it’s a criminal goal.

Johnson intervened, but not to disprove Calendar’s lies about the vaccines. Instead, Johnson said Calendar and other anti-vacciners must constantly spread lies about vaccines so they can convince people that they are giving people HIV or AIDS.

“It’s down the road,” Johnson said of criminalizing health officials such as Dr. Anthony Fauci, the president’s chief medical adviser. “You have to do it step by step. Everything you say may be true, but at the moment the public sees vaccines as largely safe and effective.”

Johnson, who will be re-elected this year, is one of the most right-wing members of the Senate. He insisted that the veterinary drug Ivermectin be used to fight COVID – although there is no evidence of its effectiveness – and even suggested that mouthwash could defeat the disease that has killed nearly 1 million Americans, according to the Wisconsin Examiner.

Johnson’s conspiracy theories and misconceptions concern HIV and AIDS before his discussion with Calendar. He shamefully said in December that Fauci had “exaggerated HIV” and AIDS in the 1980s. More than 36 million people have died from AIDS-related complications since the beginning of the pandemic.