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Flying Syringes: The Bill Gates-Funded Project For Vaccine Delivery


Researchers at Leiden University, supported by the Gates Foundation, have developed genetically modified mosquitoes.

These are bloodsuckers that can deliver malaria vaccines while biting.

A recent study found that mosquitoes infected with a modified malaria parasite can help the immune system by stopping the infection.

But what’s the end goal?

What other vaccine do they want put in these ‘flying syringes’?

Pump up the mosquitoes full of mRNA and COVID vaccines to unleash on the population?

Bill Gates has invested heavily in malaria research, exploring new technology like mosquito-based vaccines and mRNA technology.

He’s determined to get past ‘vaccine hesitancy’ and get his chemicals into the masses.

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Why am I getting supervillain vibes?

I’m with UltraMagaRx. This maniac needs to be stopped!

Breitbart reports:

Researchers at Leiden University Medical Center, backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, have developed a new method of delivering malaria vaccines using genetically modified mosquitoes as “flying vaccinators.”

The Blaze reports that in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, scientists have demonstrated the effectiveness of using mosquitoes as “flying syringes” to vaccinate humans against malaria. The research, conducted at the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) in the Netherlands with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, represents a new and potentially worrying advancement in vaccine technology.

The study involved genetically modifying malaria parasites to stop developing after a certain period of time in the human body. Researchers then infected mosquitoes with these engineered parasites and allowed them to bite human test subjects in a controlled setting.

The concept of using mosquitoes as “flying vaccinators” has been explored by scientists for years. In 2010, Japanese researcher Shigeto Yoshida modified mosquito saliva to deliver leishmania vaccines to mice, noting that vaccination by insect could be painless and cost-effective. However, concerns about informed consent and medical safety have hindered the development of this approach. That doesn’t appear to be a concern for Bill Gates and the professors he is funding today.

Here’s a curious flashback from summer last year.

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Malaria hasn’t been around for nearly 20 years.

Then Bill Gates starts tinkering away in his laboratory like a mad scientist…



 

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