Sunday, September 18, 2022

Bill Gates says he’s taken the brunt of COVID conspiracy abuse because people don’t know Anthony Fauci outside the U.S.

Since the outbreak of COVID-19, Bill Gates through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has spent over $2 billion to strengthen the global response to the pandemic by making vaccines available to lower-income countries and funding the development of antivirals or immunotherapies.

But in the minds of a small sector of the population, the Microsoft founder, along with Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to the U.S. President, did a lot more: They orchestrated the whole pandemic as a way of controlling the population.

“You don’t want to make fun of it. Although it’s the only way rationally to deal with it, it is pretty serious stuff,” Gates told the Guardian on Tuesday, as he addressed the COVID conspiracies surrounding him.

While the theories were founded in the U.S.—mainly by QAnon conspiracy theorists—and have engulfed both Gates’ and Fauci’s domestic work in the COVID-19 response, when the rumors spread to Europe, it was Gates who bore the brunt of the abuse due to his global status as Microsoft founder.

“It was quite a phenomenon; here in the U.S., it focused on myself and Tony Fauci, and internationally it was more just me because they didn’t know who Tony was—he really missed out on that!” Gates said.

“There have been a few cases where I’ve run into people in public where they are yelling at me that I’m putting chips into people and that’s kind of strange to see: Wow, those people really exist, it’s not just some robot sending out crazy messages."

Gates himself has mocked such claims, sarcastically tweeting that Microsoft “finally ran out of microchips” when the company retired its 27-year-old Internet Explorer browser. But the conspiracy theories have sinister undertones and dangerous repercussions in the form of vaccine hesitancy.

“I think it is starting to die down,” he said. “I hope so; it’s tragic if it made people more reluctant to trust vaccines or to wear a mask where they should have.”

Headwinds ahead

As the COVID-19 pandemic wanes, the global stage is fraught with a new set of problems. The war in Ukraine has sent the price of food and fuel soaring, sending hundreds of millions into poverty.

And as countries in Europe look insularly to protect their own citizens from the rising cost of living, their commitment to international aid and climate action is threatened, according to Gates.

Speaking to the Financial Timeshe warned the world is on track to miss almost all of the U.N. Sustainable Development Goals its leaders committed to hit by 2030.

“This is the toughest set of challenges global development has faced,” Gates said, arguing that while the COVID-19 pandemic response has made navigating international aid more difficult, “the Ukraine war is even worse.”

“Absolutely, we’re feeling that pressure—just the Ukraine war alone, you want to spend more money on defense, you want to subsidize electricity, you want to fund refugees, you want to help with the acute food crisis."

Reason for optimism

Gates, though, remains optimistic despite the disheartening news engulfing the world.

“Failure is not inevitable,” he said.

“When we set the goals, we definitely did not expect something like the pandemic, it would be awful to turn away just because we’re getting bad grades due to unexpected setbacks."

The key is to keep the funding flowing.

Bill and Melinda Gates have committed another $20 billion to their foundation to continue fighting global problems. “In the face of all these bleak developments, the need to invest, to get the better tools, to get back on track, is very important.

“In the long run I still am an optimist, that the war will end, the innovation pipeline and the kind of progress we saw until the pandemic in reducing malnutrition, reducing child death and getting digital bank accounts for women, will return. We were making progress and we can again.”


Bill Gates says some people yell at him in public, accusing him of 'putting chips into people'

bill gates
Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
  • Bill Gates said he's run into people in public who yell at him for "putting chips into people."

  • He called the conspiracy theory "tragic" if it caused people to be hesitant of vaccines or masks.

  • Gates joked that he was targeted more than Anthony Fauci because he's more known internationally.

Bill Gates talked in a recent interview with The Guardian about being targeted by conspiracy theorists during the COVID-19 pandemic, and how it's led to some people even approaching him in real life.

"There have been a few cases where I've run into people in public where they are yelling at me that I'm putting chips into people and that's kind of strange to see: 'Wow, those people really exist, it's not just some robot sending out crazy messages,'" Gates told the publication.

The billionaire said he thinks the conspiracy theory that he put microchips in the coronavirus vaccine is "starting to die down," but said "it's tragic if it made people more reluctant to trust vaccines or to wear a mask where they should have."

Conspiracy theories surrounding vaccines predate the coronavirus pandemic. The conspiracy theory that the COVID-19 vaccine is injecting a microchip connected to 5G mobile networks that can track people, started on 4plebs, a community-run channel on 4chan.

In June, when Microsoft shut down Internet Explorer, Gates quipped on Twitter that the service had to be shut down because Microsoft "ran out of microchips" from putting them in the coronavirus vaccine.

In his interview with The Guardian, Gates joked that Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to the president of the United States, "missed out" on most of the targeting because people around the world "didn't know who Tony was." In the US, the targeting mostly focused on both men.

Gates said he didn't want to make too much fun of the conspiracy theories around the vaccine because it's "pretty serious stuff."

"The innovations on how you get the truth have to be as interesting as the big lie — we face that in a number of domains, and I haven't seen as good a solution as I think we'd all like to see," he said.

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