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  • 2020-06-11 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Melinda Gates Say This About Black People and COVID-19 Vaccination? (en)
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  • In June 2020, social media users shared a meme containing text that claimed Melinda Gates said Black Americans must be first in line to receive a potential vaccine for coronavirus just after medical workers: Gates and her husband, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, run a public health advocacy non-profit called the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. She didn't say that Black people must be vaccinated after health care workers but rather suggested they should be, given known deleterious effects of the virus on people of color. Her comment came in response to a question from a Time magazine journalist who asked, Who needs [a potential COVID-19 vaccine] after health care workers? In response to the question, she said: Her statement references data that show Black people have a higher risk of dying from the COVID-19 than white people. However, some people on social media gave the comment a conspiratorial meaning. Here is one such example, with the user's name cropped out for privacy: The reference to Tuskegee above refers to the Tuskegee Study, in which the U.S. government used Black men as test subjects in a 40-year study about untreated syphilis in which they were not told researchers weren't actually treating them for the disease. We rate this claim True because Melinda Gates did say that she believed Black people, who are at high risk for falling ill and dying from COVID-19, should be among the first vaccinated. But we note that some are interpreting her statement misleadingly. She did not say, for instance, they must be vaccinated against their will. (en)
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