will to the wear linen, it feels great. lisa: it looks great, joey. will: in italy pope francis delivers his easter blessing from the balcony of st. peter s basilica. he hasp given his easter mass sunday this sun, but he plan this sunday, but he plans to give the blessing at any moment, and you will listen in live to that message. in fact, let s take a moment right now as i think the pope is about to take to the podium. [background sounds] [no audio] [speaking in native tongue] translator: that means passage, for in jesus the decisive passage of humanity has been made, the passage from death to life, from sin to to the grace, from fear to confidence, from desolation to the communion. he is the lord of time and history. i d like to say to everyone with heartfelt joy, happy easter to everyone. people responding to the holy father who is seated today. [cheers and applause] [speaking in native tongue] translator: may this easter be for each of you, dear brothers a
for example, they have a prostate cancer vaccine already out. there s also another vaccine called gardasil, you may have heard of it, that helps protect against curve call cancer cervical cancer. lisa: i think the concern a too is we re also talking about mrna which has been controversial with covid. it really took the fog of a pandemic and loosennenning restrictions for them to bring it to the mass market. if it s so safe, why kid it take a pandemic to bring it to the masses? yeah, you re absolutely correct. these vaccines, this technology has been studied since 1980s. what we ve got to the understand is there is a small subset, a small part of the population that have a genetic predisposition to disease that requires medical intervention that there are no cures for. there is no cure for huntington s disease, no cure for muscular disto my. so for some people this technology a may be all they have. but it s not meant for everyone.