According to their 2023 financials, they got 106 million in cash from investment sales, and nearly 8 billion from the trust. The investment side of their operation is a tiny drop in the bucket, especially also considering they gave away nearly 7 billion in grants and programs. If they’re trying to make money off the foundation they’re going about it in a very odd way by giving away 70 times more than they earn from investing
This isn't very convincing for me. For the benefit of other interested parties, the above citation spam categorises into:
1. The Kenyan Catholic church does not like vaccines and will argue against them even in the face of evidence to the contrary.
2. There have been some health effects among a tiny percentage of subjects in vaccination studies in India. The severity, causality, and prevalence of the effects is as yet unknown.
During COVID I dug deep into the vaccine topic and unless I completely failed at research, I couldn't find these claims of being "well documented" (and studied). If you have some studies proving how good these vaccines are, I'd be happy to see them!
Until then I only mentioned that I don't trust any of these actors. You're free to keep on trusting them.
The Kenyan case is about the polio vaccine, which we've been administering since the 1950s. The resulting nearly universal absence of polio (via tens of billions of doses administered) is indeed well documented.