It’s easy to get distracted by misinformation these days, but don’t worry…Science has got your back. #ScienceWillWin pic.twitter.com/aXVzAsfa6Z
— Pfizer Inc. (@pfizer) November 9, 2021
Deep in some high tech Jew marketing base, the Pfizer team discovered that there is a 100% overlap between people who are refusing to be injected with their experimental gene therapy drugs and people who like memes.
Hence:
Probably, people here understand that this doesn’t mean what they thought it was supposed to mean – or at least, it doesn’t mean what you would have thought they thought it was supposed to mean. If you follow me. I’m sure you’re following me.
But just in case you’re somehow not: this is the original meme:
We’ve got boomers in the audience, so let me just go ahead and post another example.
I think you get it. And before you tell me not to explain memes, please also explain to me how /b/ is not my private army. I’ll wait.
If you wanted to make that an anti-vax meme, you would reverse yellow and pink. “Wild conspiracy theories” would be holding people back from “The Science.”
So:
- Is it ironic?
- Is it a self-own?
- Is their social media guy a secret anti-vaxer?
No one knows.
All we know is: Pfizer’s going big on memes.
The Jews of Pfizer are now the newest big time memesters on Twitter, and they’re gunning for the cool kids.
When the cool kids saw this meme, they decided to sacrifice their purebloodedness in the name of The Science.
Notice. Comments turned off. Science is always open to peer review. Pfizer science studies are biased to favor the perception of effectiveness of their vaccine to maximize profits. Not to mention they are using a meme to try to seem young and hip to draw in more consumers. pic.twitter.com/5PMZ645dcp
— Mad Max (@abolishTheSEC) November 10, 2021
The intern at Pfizer running their twitter account does not grasp how the ‘escaping balloon’ meme works. Here’s a better one (that I found) that does. pic.twitter.com/XFOeqw5DEV
— Reed Esau (@reedes) November 10, 2021
Pfizer's strategy to get all of us to trust their vaccine:
– Calling you a criminal
– Blocking everyone on Twitter
– Shitty memes pic.twitter.com/FCnpfgX0ng— Greg Price (@greg_price11) November 10, 2021
Pfizer failing to meme doesn't matter when they're literally getting rich off poising your kids.
— The Prudentialist (@MrPrudentialist) November 9, 2021
When Pfizer try to meme and do it badly you know they are in panic mode 😂 https://t.co/Mb9XzGZhAn
— Ryan Rally (@RyanRallyOh) November 9, 2021
HOLY COW! @Pfizer declared a meme war? https://t.co/xABSv1NlJE pic.twitter.com/6wMTwUh8yU
— Brick Suit (@Brick_Suit) November 10, 2021
Apparently @pfizer is as good at memes as they are at vaccines.
— Aaron McIntire (@DeaceProducer) November 9, 2021
Sure let’s make creepy memes and turn off the comments👇🏼
Pfizer Inc. and its subsidiary Pharmacia & Upjohn Company Inc. have agreed to pay $2.3 billion, the largest health care FRAUD settlement in the history of the Department of Justice.
What? Science didn’t have your back? https://t.co/lTlE4A8zeU— KidDoc1992 (@KidDoc32) November 9, 2021
It’s enough.
We’ve all had exactly enough, times six million.