Microsoft Corp. co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates is a well-known proponent of vaccine research and development. But did he once tweet that vaccines should be added to the food supply?
“Vaccines in our food supply solves the problem of vaccine hesitancy,” reads what looks like a screenshot of a tweet attributed to Gates and shared on Facebook. People shared the image alongside a photo of comedian and actor Bill Cosby, and drew a nefarious parallel between Gates’ alleged action and date rape. Other versions displayed the tweet with a photo of Gates smiling next to a batch of test tubes.
(Screenshot from Instagram)
But Gates never wrote this. The tweet was fabricated.
PolitiFact reached out to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation but didn’t hear back.
In the video, Gates spoke about a partnership between his foundation and a United Kingdom agency then known as the Department for International Development, which is now part of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Gates didn’t say anything about forcing vaccines on people by using the food supply.
The tactic also wouldn’t work. The mRNA COVID-19 vaccines aren’t approved for animals and, even if they were, eating food products from a vaccinated animal wouldn’t transfer the vaccine to people.
Our ruling
Social media posts claim Bill Gates tweeted that “vaccines in our food supply solves the problem of vaccine hesitancy.”
He didn’t.
The tweet was fabricated and came from a photo illustration that NewsPunch used in a story about comments Gates made in 2018. In that talk, he said nothing about using food to force vaccinations on people.
We rate this claim Pants on Fire!