Don’t tell Kansas City Chief, Pfizer mascot, and pop music’s First Lady Travis Kelce, but his favorite pharmaceutical corporation might be on the hook for a serious legal bill for all of its many murderous lies regarding its COVID “vaccines” — at least, if the state of Kansas and its Republican Attorney General, Kris Kobach, has anything to say about it.
Related: NFL Superstar Travis Kelce Shills the Pfizer Vax
Via National Review (emphasis added):
The state of Kansas filed an explosive consumer-protection lawsuit against Pfizer last week full of accusations that the pharmaceutical giant misled the public on the safety and efficacy of its Covid-19 vaccine.
Kansas is accusing Pfizer of knowingly misleading the public about the adverse effects of its coronavirus vaccine and manipulating its vaccine-safety trials in violation of state consumer-protection law and previous consent judgements. The lawsuit cites interviews, press releases, internal documents, scientific research, government research, news reporting, and other sources of information to back up its incendiary claims.
“Pfizer said its COVID-19 vaccine was safe even though it knew its COVID-19 vaccine was connected to serious adverse events, including myocarditis and pericarditis, failed pregnancies, and deaths. Pfizer concealed this critical safety information from the public,” the lawsuit asserts.
“The information that I find especially troubling that Pfizer didn’t share was the information about the effect of Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine on pregnant women,” Kobach remarked.
Indeed: the reproductive effects of the so-called “vaccine” are perhaps the most pernicious in that they will have multi-generational effects, both in terms of potentially limiting birth rates in nations in the West already strapped for babies and in terms of all of the birth defects in the children of vaxxed women who are condemned to a lifetime of suffering and crushing medical bills.
Related: Bill Gates Met With Trump, Pressured Him Not to Investigate Vaccine Safety
Nearly irrelevant aside: I have not met many people who might be justifiably called celebrities — I got OJ Simpson on the line once because my friend was friends with his kid who played basketball at some elite private school in Florida and asked him if he did it; he hung up immediately and changed his number thereafter — but I did meet Kris Kobach in the flesh, in probably 2013 or 2014, when I delivered a Better Ingredients, Better Pizza™ Papa John’s product to his office in Topeka, Kan. A framed “Deporter in Chief” magazine cover from some corporate rag, meant as a slight, hung in his office, turning a smear into a point of pride.
His secretary insisted that I meet The Secretary (he was Secretary of State at the time, not AG) for some reason — she had that very enthusiastic glint in her eye that a devoted follower might have for a cult leader — so she ushered me into some conference room with a bunch of other people in business suits.
He looked at me for a half-second, shook my hand without eye contact, and tipped me. It was very awkward and he clearly had no interest in a long conversation with the pizza delivery guy.
Maybe someday I’ll snag an interview and get some redemptive respect.