People are discussing whether genetically engineered mosquitoes could have spread Zika,
the virus that causes nothing. Rather, look to the future, when such biting mosquitoes could deliver flying
vaccinations against
the virus that causes nothing.
In previous articles, I've established that the connection between the
Zika virus and cases of birth defects in Brazil is entirely and utterly
unproven. It is hype, not science.
But that isn't stopping the World Health Organization, the biggest
medical propaganda agency in the world, from promoting Zika hysteria to
the moon.
In the wake of this madness...
Here are a few hints and clues about a possible flying mosquito vaccinator:
sciencemag.org, 3/18/2010,
"Researchers Turn Mosquitoes Into Flying Vaccinators":
"...A group of Japanese researchers has developed a mosquito that
spreads vaccine instead of disease. Even the researchers admit,
however, that regulatory and ethical problems will prevent the critters
from ever taking wing---at least for the delivery of human vaccines.
...No regulatory agency would sign off on that, says molecular biologist
Robert Sinden of Imperial College London. Releasing the mosquitoes
would also mean vaccinating people without their informed consent, an
ethical no-no. Yoshida concedes that the mosquito would be
'unacceptable' as a human vaccine-delivery mechanism."
However, in the midst of forced hysteria about Zika, or the next virus,
or the one after that---each said to be on the verge of causing a global
holocaust---the so-called ethical considerations could go out the
window. What degree of ethics was involved, in the 1990s, when GMO
crops were allowed to be planted, without human safety studies, without
any oversight?
If not mosquitoes as the vaccine-delivery system, how about parasites?
Science Daily, 9/11/2013,
"Mosquito bites deliver potential new malaria vaccine":
"'In this paper we show that genetically engineered parasites are a
promising, viable option for developing a malaria vaccine, and we are
currently engineering the next generation of attenuated parasite strains
with the aim to enter clinical studies soon.' ...For the first time,
researchers created a weakened version of the human malaria parasite by
altering its DNA. They tested the safety of the new modified parasite by
injecting six human volunteers through mosquito bites. Five of the six
volunteers showed no infection with the parasite, suggesting that the
new genetic technique has potential as the basis for a malaria vaccine."
As they say, what could possibly go wrong?
And now, here is a peek into where Japanese researchers pioneering mosquito-vaccinators obtained their funding.
From AFP, 10/24/2008:
"The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation awarded 100,000 dollars each
on Wednesday to scientists in 22 countries including funding for a
Japanese proposal to turn mosquitoes into 'flying syringes' delivering
vaccines... Among the proposals receiving funding was one from Hiroyuki
Matsuoka at Jichi Medical University in Japan. '(Matsuoka) thinks it may
be possible to turn mosquitoes that normally transmit disease into
"flying syringes," so that when they bite humans they deliver vaccines,'
the Gates Foundation said."
Who wouldn't feel comfortable about Bill Gates spearheading this program? Answer: any human with a few operating brain cells.
As technically difficult as the program may be---and as fraught with
"ethical considerations"---don't underestimate the madness of the
perpetrators.
A year from now, five years from now, you might read this sort of declaration from the World Health Organization:
"People remember the Zika virus and the threat it posed to our human
future, before the heroic efforts of researchers and public-health
officials managed to get it under control. And now with the new
SanDab-3 virus spreading and spiraling out of control, we are poised to
permit the release of 32 million mosquitoes who have been altered so
they can deliver a SanDab vaccine to millions of endangered people all
over the planet. It is our best option at this time, during the
crisis..."
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