Along with Peter McCullough, another one of WorldNetDaily’s favorite COVID misinformers is Robert Malone, whose role in working with mRNA vaccines WND has helped to embellish. It hasn’t done as much late with Malone as it has with McCullough, but he still get favorable, uncritical press at WND. An Aug. 19 article by Art Moore touted how Malone was suing the Washington Post for exposing his COVID vaccine lies:
Dr. Robert Malone, a leading critic of the COVID-19 vaccines and an inventor of the mRNA technology platform on which they are based, filed a $50 million defamation lawsuit against the Washington Post on Friday for accusing him of spreading “dangerous lies” and “leading his followers on a journey to illness, suffering and possible death.”
In an hour-long video interview Friday with WND (embedded below), Malone explained that many major news outlets, including the New York Times, have cast him in a similar light. But the Post’s report Jan. 24 on his speech at the “Defeat the Mandates” rally in front of the Lincoln Memorial was “particularly egregious,” he said.
After receiving a cease-and-desist letter from his lawyer, Malone said, the Post “put out another attack article in which they repeated the same defamatory statements.”
“So that appears to show malice,” he said.
But while Moore cites claims Malone says are defamatory, it’s not explain how that it so. Moore also didn’t mention that Malone is being represented in the lawsuit by Steven Biss, an attorney who loves to file dubious defamation lawsuits to silence the critics of his clients (Devin Nunes, for one, for whom Biss sued to silence a satirical Twitter account purporting to be Nunes’ cow) to the point that he has gotten sanctioned. While the lawsuit seems to be ongoing — few documents beyond Malone’s complaint are public, though one paywalled document is the Post’s request for dismissal due to “failure to state a claim” — WND hasn’t reported on it since.
(Malone has a history of retaliating against his critics, having once exposed the name and workplace of a doctor who reported him to a state medical board for spreading COVID misinformation, which then caused the doctor to receive threats, verbal attacks and retaliatory complaints.)
Moore devoted a Nov. 19 article to Malone’s new book:
The coronavirus pandemic has been a revelation to many, not least to Dr. Robert Malone, the inventor of the mRNA technology platform used in the Pfizer and Moderna COVID vaccines he vehemently opposes.
In a new book, “Lies My Gov’t Told Me and the Better Future Coming.” he recounts going from – in the eyes of establishment media and government – esteemed vaccine inventor to purveyor of “misinformation.”
Malone sets the stage with an opening chapter intriguingly titled “How I Got Red-Pilled, and the Gradual Reveal.”
The book – written with his wife, Jill Glasspool Malone – includes chapters by other outspoken physician scientists, Drs. Meryl Nass, Paul Marik and Pierre Kory. And there’s one by Ed Dowd, the former Wall Street analyst who has compiled evidence from the insurance and funeral industries, and government databases showing a spike in excess deaths corresponding to the rollout of the COVID mRNA vaccines.
Moore wouldn’t say it, but Malone has thrown in his lot with anti-vaxxers, given how the book’s forward is written by prominent anti-vaxxer Robert Kennedy Jr. and the cover bears the logo of Kennedy’s anti-vaxx group, Children’s Health Defense.
Bob Unruh called on Malone to complain about the CDC’s use of language in a Jan. 7 article:
Dr. Robert W. Malone, a renowned physician and biochemist whose worked has focused on the mRNA technology that was used in the COVID-19 shots, is chiding the U.S. Centers for Disease Control for wanting to rid the nation of “wrong-speak.”
In a column that appeared at the Brownstone Institute, he cited the CDC’s new “guide” that imposes requirements for “how we are all to speak and write.”
The orders to America are found under the agency’s “Preferred Terms for Select Population Groups & Communities.”
“Now, how exactly this guide fits in with the CDC mission is beyond me,” he noted, since the agency is “tasked with disease control and prevention …. not tasked with correcting wrong-speak.”
Neither Malone nor Unruh explained why it’s somehow a bad thing to not denigrate people through use of careless and stereotypical language, especially when you’re trying to help them as the CDC is.