Aaron Rodgers Says That HIV Was Created By The US Government: ‘The Gameplan Was Made In The 80s’

aaron rodgers looking into the distance

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New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers recently made an appearance on a podcast that bills itself as a place for “red-pilled martial arts stars, comedians, rock stars, and conspiracy theorists,” and the topics of conversation that the 40-year-old QB discussed certainly lived up to that description.

Among the many topics broached on the podcast — including Rodgers’ fear that immigrants will join and then turn on the United States army — the one that seems to be receiving a particular amount of backlash is his implication that the government created HIV.

“The blueprint, the gameplan was made in the 80s,” Rodgers said on the Look Into It podcast.

“Create a pandemic, with a virus that’s going wild. Fauci was given over $350 million to research this, to come up with drugs, new or repurposed to handle the AIDS pandemic. And all they came up with was AZT. And if you do even a smidge of research — and I know, I’m not an epidemiologist, I’m not a doctor, I’m not an immunologist, whatever the f—, I can read, though. And I can learn and look things up just like any normal person. I can do my own research, which is so vilified, to even question authority,” he continued.

Rodgers then distressed back into his point about the HIV crisis in the 1980s being a “gameplan” of the United States government.

“But that was the gameplan back then: create an environment where only one thing works. Back then, AZT. Now? Remdesivir. Until we get a vaccine. Which, by the way, Anthony Fauci had stake in the Moderna vaccine. And we know Pfizer is one of the most criminally corrupt organizations ever. The fine they paid was the biggest in the history of the DOJ [Department of Justice] in 2009. Like, what are we talking about? We’re going to put our full trust in science that can’t be questioned.”

While Rodgers’ appearance on the Look Into It podcast happened in late February, the things he said during the interview have been coming to light in recent weeks due to increased scrutiny following reports that fringe Presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was considering Rodgers as his running mate, prompting journalists to pay the $15 to get past the paywall for the episode.

At this time, the New York Jets have yet to release a statement about their quarterback’s increasingly controversial views. One person who has, however, is former NFL receiver Antonio Brown, who joked on Twitter that Rodgers is far more gone than he is.