Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued pharmaceutical giant Pfizer on Thursday for using "Highly misleading" rhetoric to con Americans into getting the company's Covid-19 shot despite its failure to prevent infection or transmission.
Pfizer debuted the jab in late 2020 with the promise that it was 95 percent effective against Covid-19 infection.
The lawsuit out of Texas alleges that the company "Engaged in false, deceptive, and misleading acts and practices by making unsupported claims" about its Covid jab that violated the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.
"Pfizer created the false impression that its vaccine provided a substantially greater amount of protection against COVID-19 infection than what it afforded in reality. Pfizer undertook a continuous and widespread campaign comprised of the deceptive concerning [sic] alleged above for the purpose of misleading the public about the efficacy of its vaccine," the lawsuit states.
Even after Pfizer sold and distributed millions of its so-called miracle shots across the nation Covid cases increased.
When Americans called these statistics into question, Paxton said, Pfizer responded by dubbing them "Criminals" and joining the White House in demanding that Big Tech companies censor anyone who dabbled in what they deemed to be vaccine "Misinformation." "We are pursuing justice for the people of Texas, many of whom were coerced by tyrannical vaccine mandates to take a defective product sold by lies," Paxton said in a statement on Thursday.
Paxton warned at the onset of his investigation in May that the "Potentially fraudulent activity" of vaccine manufacturers like Pfizer is fair game for a lawsuit because it "Falls outside the scope of legal immunity."
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