Astrazeneca.. it all fits. I mean astra could mean star. But then you would still have “stars that kill”.
Nothing like putting it right in our faces, eh?
Petey
Petey. counterpoint;
There is a famous example of Ford trying to sell the Ford Nova in South America; We think of the force and power of an exploding start! In South America Nova meant “It won’t go” which is not a good name for your car! They did not sell well because they did not have someone who spoke Spanish in their branding/marketing department.
Astrazeneca Astra does mean star in Greek and they admit that.
While its is not impossible that someone in Britain who named their company Zeneca knew Sanskrit I think we read into it to say they were using their company name to send the message “That Kills” in Sanskrit. If anything they would try to avoid that in their merger in the 1990s. (We would have to say that in the 1990s they looked forward to the 2020s with an intention to kill?)
No, I think they want to make a profit and they are having problems with a hurriedly created vaccine.
As far as the the project to kill off a bunch of humans? There are some people up high who do want that.
I think astra probably meant ‘star’ before the Greek and Sanskrit, back in the days of the theorized proto Indo-European language that came west out of the Caucasus and south to Hindustan.