A four-year war, and they won
/By Jane C. Timm
President Donald Trump has suggested multiple times that a coronavirus vaccine could come within months, an accelerated timeline that prominent health experts and veteran vaccine developers say is unlikely absent a miracle.
"We're looking to get it by the end of the year if we can, maybe before," Trump said Friday during in a Rose Garden event centered on his administration's efforts to fast-track a vaccine.
“Vaccine work is looking VERY promising, before end of year,” Trump tweeted on Thursday.
“I think we’re going to have a vaccine by the end of the year,” he told reporters later in the day.
But experts say that the development, testing and production of a vaccine for the public is still at least 12 to 18 months off, and that anything less would be a medical miracle.
Big-Tech expert says Google’s manipulations shifted at least 6 million votes to Biden
And
Trump would have won 311 Electoral College votes if the media weren’t biased.
And it’s certainly no coincidence that the drug companies delayed their success with vaccines until 3-days after the election.