WATCH: Pfizer Official ‘Physically Assaults’ James O’Keefe, ‘Destroys iPad Showing Undercover Recordings’

Project Veritas released video footage Thursday night allegedly showing a Pfizer official becoming angered after being confronted by journalist James O’Keefe over recent remarks that he was caught making during an undercover sting video.

The man, identified as Jordon Trishton Walker, Pfizer’s director of research and development, strategic operations – mRNA scientific planner, was confronted by O’Keefe at a restaurant.

Project Veritas said that Walker “physically assault[ed]” O’Keefe and destroyed the iPad that O’Keefe brought with him that he used to replay Walker’s remarks.

“You work for Pfizer,” O’Keefe said to Walker. “My question for you is, why does Pfizer wanna hide from the public the fact that they’re mutating the COVID viruses?”

“Is this real life?” a shocked Walker replied. “This is absurd.”

“You’re on video,” O’Keefe responded as he replayed Walker’s previous comments.

“You f*cked up,” Walker said, claiming that he lied to the undercover Project Veritas operative because he was “trying to impress a person on a date.”

“I’m not even a scientist,” he claimed.

WATCH:

SHOCKING: @Pfizer Director Physically Assaults @JamesOKeefeIII & Veritas Staff; Destroys iPad Showing Undercover Recordings About “Mutating” Covid Virus; NYPD RESPONDS!

“I’m just someone who’s working in a company that’s trying to literally help the public.”

“You fu*ked up!” pic.twitter.com/83OWqlKd4t

— Project Veritas (@Project_Veritas) January 26, 2023

During the first video that Project Veritas released of Walker this week, Walker said, “One of the things we’re exploring is like, why don’t we just mutate it [COVID] ourselves so we could create — preemptively develop new vaccines, right?”

“So, we have to do that,” he said. “If we’re gonna do that though, there’s a risk of like, as you could imagine — no one wants to be having a pharma company mutating f***ing viruses.”

When the Project Veritas interviewer asks if such work would be illegal gain-of-function research, the man identified as Walker calls it “directed evolution” of the virus, which he insists is not the same thing.

“Don’t tell anyone. Promise you won’t tell anyone,” Walker says on the video. “The way it [the experiment] would work is that we put the virus in monkeys, and we successively cause them to keep infecting each other, and we collect serial samples from them.”

Still, the man identified as Walker acknowledges that such research could be dangerous, saying an accident could trigger a repeat of what he suspects happened in the Wuhan lab where many believe COVID first escaped.

“You have to be very controlled to make sure that this virus [COVID] that you mutate doesn’t create something that just goes everywhere,” the man says. “Which, I suspect, is the way that the virus started in Wuhan, to be honest. It makes no sense that this virus popped out of nowhere. It’s bulls***.”

“You’re not supposed to do gain-of-function research with viruses. Regularly not,” he continued. “We can do these selected structure mutations to make them more potent. There is research ongoing about that. I don’t know how that is going to work. There better not be any more outbreaks because, Jesus Christ.”

The man identified as Walker describes the relationship between Pfizer and government regulators as a “revolving door” that is “pretty good for the industry,” but bad for America.

“Because if the regulators, who review our drugs, you know that once they stop being a regulator, they want to go work for the company, they are not going to be as harsh on the company where they’re getting their job,” he says.

At another point in the video, he acknowledges that COVID has made Pfizer billions, and will likely continue to do so no matter how the virus evolves.

“Who knows? I mean, either way, it’s going to be a cash cow,” he says. “COVID will probably be a cash cow for us for a while going forward. Like, obviously …”

After ‘Splash Mountain’ Ride Closes, Online Sellers Offer Samples Of The Water, For A Few Dollars, Or Even Thousands

Online persons are using the closing of Disney World‘s “Splash Mountain” attraction as a chance to make a quick buck by selling the alleged water from the ride.

Splash Mountain, the enormously popular log flume ride at Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom theme park, closed on Monday in preparation to be rebuilt as a more “inclusive” ride. But Disney fans, eager to preserve the memory of the iconic ride, are looking for souvenirs. To that end, internet salespeople are looking to cash in by selling alleged water from the ride.

A quick search of “Splash Mountain Water” on eBay yields some interesting results. Entrepreneurial eBay auctioneers are selling bottles, mason jars, and even plastic bags purportedly full of water from the ride, at prices ranging from just a few dollars to hundreds. One product is a plastic bag that allegedly contains 4 ounces of water from the ride, with “Splash Mountain Water 1/22/2023” written in black marker on the bag, with water droplets drawn on it; it is selling for $13.50.

A similar bag full of water is selling for $25. One auction was for a reusable bottle full of the water, selling for $27; that auction was ended because the item was no longer available. Another person was selling a small mason jar full of the water. The image of the item shows a person holding the jar and standing in front of the ride entrance; that image has been appropriated by other sellers for their own auctions. And one seller is offering a tupperware container of the water for just 99 cents. One person selling their water sample for charity offers it “with rocks from the ride.” As of the publication of the piece, the water has 13 bids and is selling for $91.

But many sellers are charging more than a pretty penny for their used log flume backwash. One seller advertises “AUTHENTIC Water From 01/22/23,” but with no picture of the item, only stock photos of the ride; it is being sold for $700. “OWN YOUR PIECE OF HISTORY,” the listing entices. Another person offers a half-filled water bottle for the low, low price of $1000. One seller advertises, “RARE Disney 2023 Splash Mountain Attraction Flume Water” in a custom Ziploc bag for a bargain; only $5000. One seller offers a 16.9 ounce water bottle of the water; as of publication, it currently has a whopping 40 bids and is selling for $5,100.

One Disney World guest who has ridden Splash Mountain more than 200 times, summed things up succinctly. “The Disney community can be very weird sometimes,” Adrian Vasquez told The New York Times. “I honestly don’t know how else to put it.”

Splash Mountain took guests for the final ride down its 50-foot drop on Sunday. The ride opened in 1992 and has been a popular staple of Disney World’s Magic Kingdom ever since, with celebrities like Princess Diana going for a ride. But the company announced in 2020 that it would shut down Splash Mountain, which was accused of having racist themes, in favor of creating a more inclusive ride themed after Princess Tiana from “The Princess and the Frog” in its place.

Some parkgoers called Splash Mountain “extremely problematic” due to “stereotypical racist tropes.” It’s based on elements from the Disney film “Song of the South” (1946), which were included on the ride.

Disclosure: The Daily Wire has announced plans for kids entertainment content.

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