LOL! You are apparently either blissfully unaware or else cravenly dishonest in your ignorance regarding the number of medical researchers with veterinarian degrees:
The number of veterinarians in the United States is inadequate to meet societal needs in biomedical research and public health. Areas of greatest need include translational medical research, veterinary pathology, laboratory-animal medicine, emerging infectious diseases, public health, academic medicine, and production-animal medicine...
This review focuses predominantly on the current need for veterinarians in biomedical research. ..
Veterinarians in academia, industry, or the government are often leaders or key team members involved in a broad array of research including basic science research, biomedical research with applications to animal or human health, laboratory-animal medicine, public health, and medical product development.
The Need for Veterinarians in Biomedical Research (nih.gov)
You feeling stupid yet? If not, keep reading and you will:
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What he is, is actually a Medical Doctor with specialty training in Veterinary Medicine, as well as having a PhD in (animal) virology. He has had an extensive career in medical research and vaccine development (as well as a stint with the Gates Foundation, which, lets face it, can hire anyone they want so only the best in their fields work there). I don't know who you think you are fooling by deriding him as an "ordinary veterinarian" (which, of course he is not), but all you are showing is your lack of understanding of this matter.