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False: Bill Gates has called for the withdrawal of COVID-19 vaccines.

Gates supports vaccination. This claim originated from a satirical article on a conspiracy site that was amplified on social media.

False: U.K. Prime minister Boris Johnson and Bill Gates are planning a "digital control grid infrastructure that will measure everything you do."

There is no evidence that mass surveillance will take place as the government plans to invest in green technologies.

Misleading: Bill Gates admits COVID-19 mRNA vaccines are not working.

Statements made by Bill Gates have been misquoted. He did not state that the COVID-19 vaccines were ineffective.

Misleading: Bill Gates said cows emit more pollution than cars.

Bill Gates never said cows pollute more than vehicles, but he did express concern about the risks of bovine flatulence, which has been misinterpreted.

False: Baby formula shortages in North America were created to help Bill Gates promote new artificial breast milk technology.

The formula shortage is the result of a product recall by a major manufacturer as well as supply chain disruptions due to recent global events.

False: Bill Gates and his “pandemic protection team” plan to control the world.

Bill Gates is planning to create a response team to help study and curb the current pandemic and any prospective ones.

False: Dr. Fauci and Bill Gates have funded research to develop a bird flu pathogen capable of infecting humans.

Gates and Fauci have previously researched bird flu to be better prepared for a future outbreak. This claim is based on a conspiracy theory.

False: Bill Gates' account is suspended on Twitter.

An altered image of Bill Gates Twitter account was posted on social media to make it appear his account had been suspended. Gate's account is active.

False: The poliovirus discovered in the U.K. is a new variant resulting from the polio vaccines modified by Bill Gates in 2000.

The U.K. variant of poliovirus is not new. Bill Gates had no role in modifying the polio vaccines and claims stating otherwise are unsubstantiated.

False: A factory owned by Bill Gates that produced synthetic lab-grown meat was burned down in the Netherlands.

Bill Gates is not a majority shareholder in the Dutch company. The building destroyed in the fire was used for delivery services.

False: Bill Gates is responsible for a polio vaccine that has paralyzed 48,000 children.

There is no evidence that polio vaccines are responsible for the widespread paralysis amongst innoculated children in India.

False: Bill Gates' genetically modified mosquitoes are responsible for mosquito-borne viruses in Florida and are part of the next planned pandemic.

GMO mosquitoes in Florida are not funded by Bill Gates. The virus in Florida is the West Nile virus, which has been found in the U.S. since 1999.

False: Bill Gates was recorded admitting that climate change is a "WEF scam."

It is clear that Bill Gates makes no such claim in the unedited version of this clip.

False: Bill Gates is responsible for monkeypox.

Social media users have inaccurately conflated Gates' comments on preparing for future pandemics with the spread of the monkeypox virus.

False: Bill Gates's pledge of $200 million to digital identities in the U.S. is a part of the global elites takeover.

The Gates Foundation pledged $200 million to expand global digital public infrastructure. The theory that it is a part of the elite takeover is false.

False: Bill Gates's TED Talk shows that the COVID-19 vaccine was intended to kill people to combat overpopulation.

Bill Gates did not talk about killing people with COVID-19 vaccines but how to tackle overpopulation by increasing global living standards.

False: Global elites such as Bill Gates and Dr Fauci lied about the benefits of COVID-19 vaccines to control the population.

COVID-19 vaccines have saved millions of lives ever since they were introduced. There is no scientific evidence to prove that vaccines cause death.

False: Bill Gates said he gets animals vaccinated to give them better genetics.

Gates's quote on helping animals survive with the help of vaccines or selective breeding has been misinterpreted to claim vaccines can alter genes.

False: Bill Gates, Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, and WHO planned another pandemic.

The event Catastrophic Contagion was held to create fictional exercises to help organizations and countries prepare for possible future pandemics.

False: Bill Gates told world leaders at the G20 summit that 'death panels' will soon be required.

Bill Gates has been misquoted from a 2010 interview to claim that at the G20 summit in 2022, he spoke about the looming requirement of death panels.