FULL CLAIM: Bill Gates stated that 'We’re taking things that are genetically modified organisms, and we’re injecting them into little kids’ arms; we just shoot them right into the vein'
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A video posted on YouTube showed a clip of Bill Gates speaking about injecting children with genetically modified organisms. The video has been viewed more than 15,000 times and shared more than 3,000 times on Facebook, according to the social media analytics tool CrowdTangle.
The clip of Bill Gates was taken from a 2015 event in Brussels as part of a discussion about genetically modified (GM) crops. GM crops are agricultural plants that have been modified using genetic engineering to introduce new traits, such as improved nutritional value or resistance to pests and herbicides. While the scientific consensus is that GM foods are safe to eat, they remain controversial among the public and farmers.
At the event, Gates used the safety testing process for medicines as an analogy to support safety testing for GM crops. Specifically, new medicines go through testing and clinical trials to determine if they are safe and effective. There are numerous stages in the safety testing process, in which results are compared between increasingly larger test groups and untreated people to assess the benefits and risks of a medicine.
The segment below contains Gates’ quote, shown in context:
“The strongest analogy is to medicines. Is there something to worry about with medicines that some of them might have side effects? Do we need safety testing? We’re taking things that are genetically modified organisms, and we’re injecting them into little kids’ arms; we just shoot them right into the vein. So, yeah, I think maybe we should have a safety system where we do trials and test things out.”
Gates used this analogy to compare the potential safety risk of new medical technology to the risk of eating GM crops. Society in general comes to accept new medicines because regulatory agencies ensure that they are safe, based on data from extensive safety testing. In other words, Gates used the example of safety testing of new medicines to argue that safety testing for GM crops is likewise required to boost their acceptance.
Gates’ statements were part of a wider discussion about the rights of African farmers to choose whether or not to use GM crops. Gates argued that GM crop techniques should not be dismissed entirely, given their potential to solve a range of problems:
“The idea though that you would take a technique that promises to solve nutrition problems, solve productivity problems, solve crop disease problems for African farmers, where it’s absolutely a life-and-death issue for them, and you would say, oh nothing that uses that technique should possibly be used.”
Essentially, Gates promoted the idea that having a safety monitoring system in place would help inform decisions by stakeholders on their use, as they do in medicine. However, the manner in which the video was edited made it appear as though Gates was promoting the idea of injecting children with genetically modified organisms, which, as demonstrated above, isn’t the case.
Genetically modified organisms are a key part of biologics production, such as vaccine manufacturing. For instance, genetically modified cells are used to produce proteins found in the hepatitis B virus and human papillomaviruses, which are the active ingredients in the respective vaccines that trigger the development of immunity against these viruses. However, it is important to note that these vaccines themselves don’t contain genetically modified organisms. These vaccines have been used for many years and data from safety monitoring shows that they are safe and effective (see here and here).
Some COVID-19 vaccines, like the ones produced by AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson, also make use of the same technology. These vaccines use a viral vector, where an existing virus called an adenovirus that causes the common cold was genetically modified to carry the genetic sequence coding for the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2. These vaccines were also shown to be safe and effective.
In summary, the video posted on YouTube left out a lot of the context around the comments from Bill Gates. Gates was speaking at an event about genetically modified crops and was arguing for the importance of safety testing.