Doctors, scientists condemn boast of AI creating ‘personalized’ mRNA cancer shots in 48 hours

By CatholicVote | Created at 2025-01-25 05:32:56 | Updated at 2025-01-27 16:57:16 2 days ago
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Physicians and scientists who have exposed the risks and lack of efficacy of the mRNA COVID-19 shots expressed shock and aversion at hearing OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Oracle CEO Larry Ellison boast that artificial intelligence (AI) will be used to create “personalized” mRNA cancer shots this week.

Altman and Ellison joined President Donald Trump at a White House press conference Tuesday during which the president touted Project Stargate, a joint venture that will invest up to $500 billion over the next four years to build AI infrastructure in the United States.

According to the project’s website, the new company “will secure American leadership in AI, create hundreds of thousands of American jobs, and generate massive economic benefit for the entire world.”

“The medical world was stunned by the bold announcement of Project Stargate, a $500B investment in artificial intelligence promising >100,000 American jobs,” cardiologist Peter A. McCullough, MD, MPH wrote Thursday at his column, Courageous Discourse. “The capper was Oracle CEO Larry Ellison painting a vision of using the technology to characterize a cancer and come up with an mRNA vaccine within 48 hours.”

McCullough described cancer as “a very complicated field in medicine that takes decades of training for oncologists to understand and present to patients.”

He acknowledged that AI can improve healthcare by collecting patients’ cancer treatment records, analyzing CT, PET, and MRI images, integrating blood tests, and surveying cancer treatment protocols. However, he wrote: “You can see NOT on this list is a 48 hour jump to a mRNA vaccine as monotherapy for cancer. The reality is that Moderna is testing mRNA products in very late stage metastatic cancer.”

The Stargate Project’s website promises it “will not only support the re-industrialization of the United States but also provide a strategic capability to protect the national security of America and its allies.”

Funding the Stargate venture are SoftBank and OpenAI – the lead partners – as well as Oracle and investment firm MGX. Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son will serve as chairman.

“I believe that, as this technology progresses, we will see diseases get cured at an unprecedented rate,” Altman said. “We’ll be amazed at how quickly we’ll be curing this cancer and that one, and heart disease.”

Oracle’s Ellison said that, with AI technology, cancer detection could be made with a simple blood test, followed by the generation of a “personalized” vaccine. 

“You can make that vaccine, that mRNA vaccine, you can make that robotically again using AI in about 48 hours,” Ellison claimed. “Imagine early cancer detection, the development of a cancer vaccine for your particular cancer aimed at you, and have that vaccine available in 48 hours. This, this is the promise of AI and the promise of the future.”

Epidemiologist Nicolas Hulscher, MPH, expressed serious reservations about the plan as well. “We must remember that mRNA injection payloads (LNPs [lipid nanoparticles] and mRNA) distribute throughout the entire body and will not stay confined to the cancer sites, leading to potentially serious off-target effects,” Hulscher warned Wednesday, also at Courageous Discourse. “This lesson was already learned from the COVID-19 mRNA ‘vaccination’ debacle.”

In September, Ellison drew controversy with his intimidating vision of an AI surveillance system, complete with police body cameras, car cameras, and autonomous drones, that would continually watch and provide reports on police and citizens – causing all to be on their “best behavior.”

Oracle's Larry Ellison says a surveillance system of police body cams, cameras on cars and autonomous drones, all monitored by AI, will constantly record and report on police and citizens, leading everyone to be on their best behavior pic.twitter.com/RAq5XGaNmZ

— Tsarathustra (@tsarnick) September 15, 2024

Vinay Prasad, M.D., MPH, professor at the University of California San Francisco, agreed AI could have many uses in the healthcare industry, but wrote – “mRNA vaccines I’m less excited about.”

“They clearly have unique and idiosyncratic toxicity,” he asserted. “Because they were pushed so hard for covid-19, there’s a huge fraction of the public who does not want them. They do have unexplored long-term safety questions. I’m not going to be standing in line to get any.”

“AI will do a lot of good things,” Prasad posted to X. “But it won’t cure cancer.”

AI will do a lot of good things. But it won't cure cancer. Here are a few reasons why
1. AI is trained on the best available published literature. If you have AI read all of the papers in cancer, you have just had AI read 50% or more of literature that cannot be reproduced or… https://t.co/lsmG0hg2L8

— Vinay Prasad MD MPH (@VPrasadMDMPH) January 22, 2025

UK-based public health physician Dr. Ash Paul agreed:

“Reality check. Curb your enthusiasm, and beware of grifters,” physician and scientist Robert Malone, M.D., M.S., also wrote Wednesday, taking a no-nonsense approach to the mRNA shot project and offering some words of warning to Trump.

“Here they go again,” Malone added. “Really? Is this the narrative you would want to push two days into your second term as President of the USA?”

“Calling Susie Wiles, press room, STAT, we have an emergency narrative control problem,” Malone continued. “I can’t believe that we are being spoon-fed this hype from the likes of Oracle’s Larry Ellison so soon after the inauguration.” 

“Having this guy lecture us on mRNA vaccines for cancer is over the top. And apparently the prior propaganda reference to ‘Star Trek’ (operation warp speed) is no longer effective, and we need something bigger, more potent,” Malone pointed out. “Something else out of science fiction television that evokes yet another trendy topic – ‘unidentified aerial phenomena’ (UAP). ‘Stargate’. Perfect. What could possibly go wrong? Marketing genius.”

“This all makes me throw up a bit in my throat,” Malone said.

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