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Fact Check: False Claim About Bill Gates Calling For ‘Depopulation By Vaccines’ Resurfaces

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 17, 2025Updated:February 17, 20253 Mins Read
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The article shares an account of a widely popular article that mistakenly claimed Bill Gates wanted to depopulate the world through the use of vaccines, thought to reduce child mortality and ultimately lower the country’s population. The article was originally published by the media outlet The Quint, as part of a series called "Shakti," except for the headline and opening paragraph, which were not modified by News18 staff. This article also referred to a 2010 speech made by Microsoft’s co-founder, Bill Gates, stating that vaccines would reduce global birth rates, causing population growth to slow and carbon emissions to decrease.

The earliest known mention of the article dates back to 2011, when The Sovereign Independent, an Ireland-based newspaper, published a misleading article about Gates’ speech. The editor of this paper, Dave Derby, noted that the first edition was released much earlier in 2009. However, this novel publication exists only in the digital archives and sources suggesting that it is on巡 are limited due to copyright restrictions.

The article went viral again by being shared online on a number of platforms. A screenshot from the cover page of June 2011 of The Sovereign Independent’s fourth edition are often seen online. In a 2013 article, The argued that the article incorrectly traced the myth to Gates’ 2010 speech, which mistakenly cited population reduction as the primary goal. Gates, however, den了一切,指出 Population Growth降速可能影响碳排放,并指出疫苗和医疗保健是降低碳排放的重要措施。

The article’s origin in The Sovereign Independent is dilapidated by Gate’s latest refusal to answer questions about the supposed connection between vaccines and population reduction. It appears that the newspaper was created for professional reasons. However, according to a forwarded note from the editor, the paper is unavailable in the digital age, which creates credibility issues for the claims made.

The fact-checkers stepped in to debunk the article, pointing out that the author relates the myth to Gates’ 2010 speech, which the argument erred. Gates did not call for the country to decrease its population; his reference was to the production capacity through better health and healthcare infrastructure. While Gates acknowledged the need for vaccines to prevent diseases such as flu and mumps, he emphasized that those out-of-the-box factors allow nations to accelerate change and achieve their goals.

The article’s potential impact is enormous, as it created frustration among readers who assumed Gates wasGetWidth, aimed at reducing global population growth, and added to networkCarol’s discussion of the ongoing battle over health, which itself stands in its own dangerous territory.

Extracting information from similar claims suggests that multiple online platforms have now been channeling truth behind the lies, highlighting the inefficiency of instantaneously sharing mutation issues. This serves as a stark reminder of the importance of verifying information and the far-reaching repercussions of misinformation in shaping public discourse.

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