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To: Cats Pajamas
Skip to comments. Trump's New Vaccine Czar Confident in Delivering Hundreds of Millions of Doses by End of Year for Covid-19

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/3845313/posts

The newly installed Trump administration vaccine czar said early clinical data gives him confidence there will be 200 to 300 million doses by the end of the year.

“I have very recently seen early data from a clinical trial with a coronavirus vaccine and these data made me feel even more confident that we will be able to deliver a few hundred million doses of vaccine by the end of 2020,” Dr. Moncef Slaoui said during an event announcing his post at the White House’s Rose Garden on Friday.

Slaoui sits on the board of Moderna, a U.S. company that’s testing a CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus vaccine candidate it developed. The virus causes COVID-19, a potentially deadly disease.

The doctor is leading Operation Warp Speed, a joint agency effort to quicken the development of vaccines to have at least one ready by January 2021.

The doctor is leading Operation Warp Speed, a joint agency effort to quicken the development of vaccines to have at least one ready by January 2021.

The Department of Health and Human Services is teaming with the Pentagon to manufacture and distribute vaccines as fast as possible. Other health agencies like the National Institutes of Health are involved.

Government experts evaluated some 100 vaccine candidates and identified 14 they believe have the best chance of succeeding. Teams working on those candidates will receive funding and other support.

Even as clinical trials continue, manufacturing will start.

“It’s risky, it’s expensive, but we will be saving massive amounts of time,” President Donald Trump said at the event. “We will be saving years if we do this properly.”

Slaoui, formerly the chairman of vaccines at GlaxoSmithKline, was described by Health Secretary Alex Azar as “arguably the world’s most experienced and successful vaccine developer.”

What could possibly go wrong?

725 posted on 05/15/2020 12:47:30 PM PDT by eldoradude (Boycott Chinese made goods)
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To: eldoradude

Perhaps drop 735 sheds some light.

Chatter amongst those in control has begun.
They know we know which means the public will know.
Release prior to cover up.
Public informed and collapse.
Which option?


747 posted on 05/15/2020 1:14:36 PM PDT by kallisti (OLDTHINKERS UNBELLYFEEL INGSOC)
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To: eldoradude

Have been reading about biologicals.

Even in Antiquity they KNEW what they were doing with bios and other nasties.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_biological_warfare
long but interesting topic
Excerpt

Antiquity
The earliest documented incident of the intention to use biological weapons is possibly recorded in Hittite texts of 1500–1200 BC, in which victims of tularemia were driven into enemy lands, causing an epidemic. Although the Assyrians knew of ergot, a parasitic fungus of rye which produces ergotism when ingested, there is no evidence that they poisoned enemy wells with the fungus, as has been claimed.

According to Homer’s epic poems about the legendary Trojan War, the Iliad and the Odyssey, spears and arrows were tipped with poison. During the First Sacred War in Greece, in about 590 BC, Athens and the Amphictionic League poisoned the water supply of the besieged town of Kirrha (near Delphi) with the toxic plant hellebore. During the 4th century BC Scythian archers tipped their arrow tips with snake venom, human blood, and animal feces to cause wounds to become infected.

In a naval battle against King Eumenes of Pergamon in 184 BC, Hannibal of Carthage had clay pots filled with venomous snakes and instructed his sailors to throw them onto the decks of enemy ships. The Roman commander Manius Aquillius poisoned the wells of besieged enemy cities in about 130 BC. In about AD 198, the Parthian city of Hatra (near Mosul, Iraq) repulsed the Roman army led by Septimius Severus by hurling clay pots filled with live scorpions at them. Like Scythian archers, Roman soldiers dipped their swords into excrements and cadavers too — victims were commonly infected by tetanus as result.

There are numerous other instances of the use of plant toxins, venoms, and other poisonous substances to create biological weapons in antiquity....

Middle Ages
The Mongol Empire established commercial and political connections between the Eastern and Western areas of the world, through the most mobile army ever seen. The armies, composed of the most rapidly moving travelers who had ever moved between the steppes of East Asia (where bubonic plague was and remains endemic among small rodents), managed to keep the chain of infection without a break until they reached, and infected, peoples and rodents who had never encountered it. The ensuing Black Death may have killed up to 25 million total, including China and roughly a third of the population of Europe and in the next decades, changing the course of Asian and European history.

During the Middle Ages, victims of the bubonic plague were used for biological attacks, often by flinging fomites such as infected corpses and excrement over castle walls using catapults. They use to tie the body along with the canon balls and use to shoot them towards the city area. In 1346, during the siege of Caffa (now Feodossia, Crimea) the attacking Tartar Forces which were subjugated by the Mongol empire under Genghis Khan, used the bodies of Mongol warriors of the Golden Horde who had died of plague, as weapons. An outbreak of plague followed and the defending forces retreated, followed by the conquest of the city by the Mongols. It has been speculated that this operation may have been responsible for the advent of the Black Death in Europe. At the time, the attackers thought that the stench was enough to kill them, though it was the disease that was deadly...


762 posted on 05/15/2020 1:30:37 PM PDT by Cats Pajamas (RIP - Main $tream Media!)
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To: eldoradude

It seems evil has always won wars with dead bodies. They don’t have to fling them over Castle walls anymore. Sometimes they just slide pieces of them into the vein of the enemy with a tiny needle with permission of course and charge for doing it.

It is brilliant on their part actually. Diabolical but brilliant.


779 posted on 05/15/2020 1:51:41 PM PDT by Cats Pajamas (RIP - Main $tream Media!)
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