I found this article:
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Experimental treatment for COVID-19
Main article: Casirivimab/imdevimab
On February 4, 2020, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which already worked with
Regeneron, announced that Regeneron would pursue monoclonal antibodies to fight COVID-19.[14]
In July 2020, under Operation Warp Speed,
Regeneron was awarded a $450 million government contract to manufacture and supply its experimental treatment REGN-COV2, an artificial "antibody cocktail" which was then undergoing clinical trials for its potential both to treat people with COVID-19 and to prevent SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus infection.[15][16][17] The $450 million came from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), the DoD Joint Program Executive Office for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Defense, and Army Contracting Command. Regeneron expected to produce 70,000–300,000 treatment doses or 420,000–1,300,000 prevention doses. "By funding this manufacturing effort, the federal government will own the doses expected to result from the demonstration project," the government said in its July 7 news release.[18] Regeneron similarly said in its own news release that same day that "the government has committed to making doses from these lots available to the American people at no cost and would be responsible for their distribution," noting that this depended on the government granting emergency use authorization or product approval.[19] California based laboratory, FOMAT, is part of the clinical investigation through their doctors Augusto and Nicholas Focil.[20]
In October 2020 when U.S. President Donald Trump was infected with COVID-19 and taken to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, he was administered REGN-COV2.[21] His doctors obtained it from
Regeneron via a compassionate use request (as clinical trials had not yet been completed and the drug had not yet been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)).[22] On October 7, Trump posted a five-minute video to Twitter reasserting that this drug should be "free."[23] That same day, Regeneron filed with the FDA for emergency use authorization. In the filing, it specified that it currently had 50,000 doses and that it expected to reach a total of 300,000 doses "within the next few months."[24] The FDA granted approval for emergency use authorization in November 2020.[25]
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It seems like Pfizer lied and pushed out their pathogen injection
Now why would Pfizer do such a thing