Vaccine truth-teller Vinay Prasad FORCED OUT of FDA post as Big Pharma tightens grip on science
In a world where government health agencies and pharmaceutical giants operate in alarming lockstep,
Dr. Vinay Prasad was a rare voice of scientific dissent — until now. His abrupt departure from the FDA’s top vaccine post after less than three months was a loss for the health freedom movement. Prasad, a hematologist-oncologist known for challenging reckless COVID-19 booster recommendations, dared to ask hard questions about vaccine safety, efficacy conflicts of interest. Now, under murky circumstances,
his tenure has been cut short. Whether pushed out by political foes, Big Pharma operatives, or bureaucratic infighting, one thing is clear: Those who threaten the vaccine-industrial complex don’t last long in Washington.
Key points:
- Prasad, appointed just months ago as director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), officially "resigned" late Tuesday under unclear circumstances.
- Anonymous sources told The Washington Post he was "ousted" following conservative smear campaigns and likely pressure from pharmaceutical stakeholders.
- His short-lived but influential FDA role was marked by opposition to blanket COVID-19 booster mandates, demands for rigorous clinical trials, and skepticism of fast-tracked drug approvals—positions that made him enemies.
- Mainstream outlets painted Prasad as a "contrarian" for questioning childhood mask mandates and myocarditis risks in young men post-mRNA vaccination.
- His removal signals a broader purge of independent thinkers within health agencies, leaving science vulnerable to industry capture.
The rise and fall of a rare FDA critic
Vinay Prasad wasn’t just another bureaucrat nodding along to Big Pharma’s demands. Unlike his predecessor, Dr. Peter Marks — who Prasad once derided as a "bobblehead doll that just stamps approval" — he refused to rubber-stamp vaccines without robust data. His May 2024 appointment sent shockwaves through the biotech sector, with stocks for Pfizer, Moderna, and gene therapy firms like Sarepta Therapeutics plunging on the news. Investors knew Prasad meant business: Actual science, not profits, would dictate approvals.
Yet his tenure was doomed from the start. With deep commitment to gold standard science (his pre-FDA research exposed how 62% of FDA-approved cancer drugs lacked proof of extending lives),
Prasad was a walking threat to the status quo. His insistence on randomized trials for updated COVID shots — and his stance on limiting boosters to high-risk groups—clashed with the Biden administration’s "jab everyone" approach. Worse, his blunt critiques of Emergency Use Authorizations (EUAs) and his exposing of "weak evidence" behind drugs like Sarepta’s Elevidys made him a target.
Why Prasad’s departure spells disaster for vaccine transparency
The official line? Prasad "did not want to be a distraction." The truth? His removal reeks of
a coordinated take-down. Right-wing agitator Laura Loomer led a vicious smear campaign against him, branding him a "progressive saboteur" who was "dressed in MAHA drag." The
Wall Street Journal piled on, falsely claiming he opposed patient autonomy in healthcare—an ironic accusation for a man who spent years fighting coercion and unlawful medical mandates. Even internal FDA battles played a role: After blocking shipments of Sarepta’s controversial muscle drug over safety concerns, he was overruled in a stunning reversal that sent the company's stock soaring.
"There’s not a political bone in his body," FDA Commissioner Marty Makary told Politico — another voice of reason sidelined by the system. Makary and Prasad co-authored a bombshell
NEJM paper challenging boosters for young people, citing myocarditis risks outweighing any alleged benefits of the experimental technology.
The hidden forces pushing dissenters out of government
While Prasad's move out of Washington and back home with his family is better for his sanity, Prasad’s exit isn’t an isolated incident. It mirrors the
systematic removal of anti-establishment figures from health agencies under both parties. From Trump-era NIH critics to Kennedy-appointed reformers, those who challenge Big Pharma’s monopoly on truth are purged quietly but effectively. With Prasad gone, the path is clear for another industry-friendly yes-man to helm the FDA's CBER — ensuring more rushed approvals, fewer questions, and zero accountability.
Children’s Health Defense CEO Mary Holland summed it up best: "Did Big Pharma trigger the fall? Ideological foes? Infighting at FDA? Some combination? We may never know." But one truth remains: In America’s broken medical landscape, honest scientists don’t survive.
Sources include:
ChildrensHealthDefense.org
WashingtonPost.com
SeattleTimes.com