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    GORGworld conspiracy // 911 // free world order! ... part 5 ::
    ARRAKIS
    ARRAKIS --- ---
    DEPOPULATION ALERT: Shocking new study reveals covid vaccine TERMINATES 4 out of 5 pregnancies via “spontaneous abortions” – NaturalNews.com
    https://www.naturalnews.com/2021-07-01-depopulation-alert-shocking-new-study-reveals-covid-vaccine-terminates-4-out-of-5-pregnancies-via-spontaneous-abortions.html
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    If Bill Gates was a mechanic. Sound Familiar?
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLB4u-xL5zs&t=149s
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Ministr zdravotnictví není římský diktátor, neudržel se správní soud - iDNES.cz
    https://www.idnes.cz/zpravy/domaci/nejvyssi-spravni-soud-ministerstvo-zdravotnictvi-testovani.A210629_101938_domaci_ajez

    Není možné připustit, aby se v demokratickém právním státě stal ministr zdravotnictví (byť s dobrými úmysly) dokonce bez vyhlášení nouzového stavu osobou obdobnou římskému diktátorovi s rozsáhlou možností regulovat lidské chování,“ píše se v posledním rozhodnutí.

    ...

    Další část se věnuje také přístupu odborné veřejnosti a vědců k pandemii covidu-19. „Protože naprostá shoda mezi odborníky je ve vědě v podstatě vyloučena, nemohla by, dle argumentace navrhovatelky, existovat žádná skutečnost. Ta však dle běžné skutečnosti existuje a uznávají ji v podstatě i všechny filozofické přístupy, snad kromě radikálního ontologického solipsismu. Na ten však soud odmítá přistoupit, protože pak by na světě existoval jen soudce zpravodaj této věci, který by toto rozhodnutí psal sám pro sebe,“ uvedl NSS.

    NSS tak vtipně reagoval na návrh, že nepanuje-li mezi odborníky v konkrétní záležitosti naprostá shoda, nejde o vědecký fakt, nýbrž pouze o vědeckou teorii. Z té se zároveň, podle navrhovatelky, stává politická ideologie, kterou je nutno zavrhnout.

    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    RNA vaccine - Wikipedia
    https://web.archive.org/web/20210614140319/https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA_vaccine#History

    The first mRNA vaccine experiments were carried out by P. Felgner, J. Wolff, G. Rhodes, R.W. Malone and D. Carson. P. They completed a number of mRNA vaccination studies that resulted in nine patents on mRNA vaccination with a shared priority date of March 21, 1989. One experiment documented that NEF (an HIV protein) mRNA vaccination in mice, followed by HIV challenge reduced positively stained cells by 2-fold and p24 expression was reduced by 50% at eight weeks. [18][19][20]

    Pro porovnani - ted ta wiki neobsahuje reference na zadnou studii/patent , ktery by byl primo o te vakcine. Jen novinove clanky, kde se o nich hovori, ale uz se tam tolik nezminuje ten Malone.

    takze, co by tam byvalo mohlo byt

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:RNA_vaccine#Semi-protected_edit_request_on_2_March_2021

    History

    In 1987, while a graduate student at UC San Diego and the Salk Institute, Robert W Malone discovered that mRNA could transfect mRNA into a variety of eukaryotic cells and embryos [1], [2], [3], [4]). Robert W Malone developed mRNA delivery, in collaboration with Philip Felgner at Syntex, who had pioneered the use of artificially-created cationic lipids (positively-charged lipids) to bind lipids to nucleic acids in order to transfect the latter into cells in the mid 1980s. Phil Felgner was then recruited to help launch a new biotech startup in San Diego called Vical.[15]. While at the Salk Institute, Robert W Malone developed the theory of DNA and RNA vaccination and described a variety of potential applications for use of synthetic RNA as a drug. This work was reduced to practice, patent disclosures and an application filed in March 1989 through the Salk Institute ([5]). These studies were the first evidence that in vitro transcribed (IVT) mRNA could deliver genetic information to produce proteins within living cell tissue.

    Robert Malone shortly thereafter went to work for Vical, bringing his discoveries and reagents with him. He established the molecular biology laboratory at Vical, designed the original DNA and RNA delivery studies at Vical (with and without cationic lipids) and also synthesized the DNA and RNA that was shipped to the University of Wisconsin where the in-vivo work was performed, as Vical did not have animal facilities at the time. These experiments had positive results where "naked" (or unprotected) mRNA was injected into the muscle of mice and is the first demonstration of this delivery strategy. The patent disclosures for this initial discovery included detailed discussions of mRNA and DNA vaccine applications [6] and [7]

    In vitro mRNA vaccination in animals was first published in a peer reviewed journal in 1990 by the Merck team, which had bought the Vical intellectual property rights. In 1993, Martinon demonstrated that liposome-encapsulated RNA could stimulate T-cells in vivo, and in 1994, Zhou & Berglund published the first evidence that RNA could be used as a vaccine to elicit both humoral and cellular immune response against a pathogen.[3][22][23]

    In 1996, RNA vaccination into mammals was further developed when Jill and Robert W Malone demonstrated that production of a mucosal immune response in a host by administration of an antigen-encoding polynucleotide preparation, comprising DNA or RNA encoding an antigenic epitope to a mucosal inductor site in the mucosal tissue of the host could be elicited (reference #6 and 7). [8], [9]

    Hungarian biochemist Katalin Kariko attempted to solve some of the main technical barriers to introducing mRNA into cells in the 1990s. Kariko partnered with American immunologist Drew Weissman, and by 2005 they published a joint paper that solved one of the key technical barriers by using modified nucleosides to get mRNA inside cells without setting off the body's defense system.[3][24] Harvard stem cell biologist Derrick Rossi (then at Stanford) read Kariko and Weissman's paper and recognized that their work was "groundbreaking",[24] and in 2010 founded the mRNA-focused biotech Moderna along with Robert Langer, who also saw its potential in vaccine development.[24][3] Like Moderna, BioNTech also licensed Kariko and Weissman's work.[24]

    In 2000, German biologist Ingmar Hoerr published an article on the efficiency of RNA‐based vaccines, which he studied as part of his doctoral degree.[25][26] After completing his PhD, he founded CureVac together with his PhD supervisor Günther Jung, Steve Pascolo, Florian von der Muelbe, and Hans-Georg Rammensee. Up until 2020, these mRNA biotech companies had poor results testing mRNA drugs for cardiovascular, metabolic and renal diseases; selected targets for cancer; and rare diseases like Crigler–Najjar syndrome, with most finding that the side-effects of mRNA insertion were too serious.[27][28] mRNA vaccines for human use have been developed and tested for the diseases rabies, Zika, cytomegalovirus, and influenza, although these mRNA vaccines have not been licensed.[29] Many large pharmaceutical companies abandoned the technology,[27] while some biotechs re-focused on the less profitable area of vaccines, where the doses would be at lower levels and side-effects reduced.[27][30] Glasspool1 (talk) 17:32, 2 March 2021 (UTC)

    References

    Cationic Lipid-mediated RNA and DNA Transfection, Patent Application US 326,620. Inventor: Robert W Malone, Inder Verma, Vical file no. S48014. Priority date 1988.
    A Novel Approach to Study Packaging of Retroviral RNA by RNA Transfection, R. Malone et.al Abstract presented at “RNA Tumor Virus meeting, Cold Spring Harbor May 17-22, 1089.
    mRNA Transfection of cultured eukaryotic cells and embryos using cationic liposomes. Malone RW. Focus. 1989;11:61-8.
    Cationic liposome-mediated RNA transfection, R W Malone, P L Felgner, I M Verma. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Aug 1989, 86 (16) 6077-6081; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.86.16.6077.
    Cationic Lipid-mediated RNA and DNA Transfection, Patent Application US 326,620. Inventor: Robert W Malone, Inder Verma. Vical file no. S48014.
    5. Induction of a protective immune response in a mammal by injecting a DNA sequence. Assigned to Vical, Inc, licensed to Merck. US Pat. Ser. No. 5,589,466, date of issue: 12/31/96. Priority date: March 21, 1989.
    Direct gene transfer into mouse muscle in vivo. Wolff JA, Malone RW, et al. Science. 1990;247(4949 Pt 1):1465-8.
    7. DNA vaccines for eliciting a mucosal immune response. US Pat. Ser. No. 6,110,898, date of issue: 8/29/00, priority date 1996.
    Mucosal immune responses associated with polynucleotide vaccination. Malone JG, …, Malone RW. Behring Inst Mitt. 1997(98):63-72.
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    RIVA: Zajímavé. Já se divil, proč první vynálezce tam není zmíněný jménem. Zjevně tam smazali i reference na jeho práci na první mRNA vakcíně

    Patent Database Search: Error
    https://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=/netahtml/PTO/srchnum.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&d=PALL&s1=5589466.PN.

    Odkazy na studie nahradili články z novin, kde se vývoj mRNA shrnuje a zaměřuje na COVID vakcínu a mrazáky s mrtvolama.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:RNA_vaccine#%22Before_the_COVID-19_pandemic,_no_mRNA_drug_or_vaccine_was_licensed_for_use_in_humans.%22_?!
    tady nekdo prosi, aby se smazala zminka, ze do te doby nebyly vakciny schvalene pro lidi, protoze prece cetl, ze se pouzivaly uz od roku 1990, ale byl zchlazen fakty pro zatim
    This is a quote from the article. Can anybody help check that as it is a big reason here in the dutch speaking region why people do not want to get vaccinated. Enfin, here the claim circulates that mRNA vaccines are still experimental and new, whereas "The use of RNA vaccines goes back to the early 1990s." Thy and greetings from Brussels :), SvenAERTS (talk) 09:50, 2 February 2021 (UTC)

    Go read the Stat article already cited in the article as the basis for that statement (the footnote is attached to the sentence after the one you just quoted). The article specifically says: "Although relatively easy and quick to produce compared to traditional vaccine-making, no mRNA vaccine or drug has ever won approval." That article explains most of the difficulties encountered in bringing mRNA vaccines and drugs to market. Quartz has published its own article which explains the other major difficulty involved: developing an adequate delivery system for mRNA. --Coolcaesar (talk) 15:56, 2 February 2021 (UTC)
    Also, Derek Lowe at Science Translational Medicine has just published a blog post which explains at length and in plain English why it is so hard to scale up the manufacturing of mRNA vaccines. --Coolcaesar (talk) 17:33, 3 February 2021 (UTC)


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:RNA_vaccine#Semi-protected_edit_request_on_2_March_2021

    Not done for now: This seems largely based on primary sources (patents, WP:PRIMARY studies as explained at MEDRS) - and additionally, it is mostly the work by one researcher (RW Malone) who doesn't even have a page here. This level of detail about that might be WP:UNDUE. RandomCanadian (talk / contribs) 15:39, 5 March 2021 (UTC)
    An edit very similar to this edit seems to have been approved now (on 6/9/21 and maintained as of 6/12/21), but I am not sure why. I am not an RNA vaccine expert so I cannot comment on the validity of the edit directly, but I am a scientist and noticed the inconsistent and nonstandard citation styles (an unusual two author followed by et. al citation, "Jon A. Wolff, Robert W Malone, et. al.", and then an unusual five author citation, "P. Felgner, J. Wolff, G. Rhodes, R.W. Malone and D. Carson. P."). These strange choices seem to be cherry-picked to ensure maximum instances of the name Robert Malone, who has a history of unilateral self-promotion online. I'm not familiar with wikipedia standards, but is there a way to recommend review to ensure these edits are accurate and unbiased? Essennar (talk) 17:30, 12 June 2021 (UTC)

    Is it not correct that Robert W. Malone was one of the original inventors of mRNA vaccination? If correct, why isn't his name mentioned at least a single time in the current version of this article? 173.88.246.138 (talk) 04:10, 21 June 2021 (UTC)


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:RNA_vaccine#Revert_removal_of_Robert_Malone_references


    These edits by user Alexbrn are attempting to hide the history of mRNA's discovery by removing all references to Robert Malone. I suspect this is due to the recent controversy surrounding Robert, yet that does not make this edit appropriate. Please reverse these three abusive edits attempting to hide the history of mRNAs discovery. https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=RNA_vaccine&diff=1029988072&oldid=1029743206 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=RNA_vaccine&diff=1030322202&oldid=1030284345 https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=RNA_vaccine&diff=1030787298&oldid=1030331671

    This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.
    Asailum (talk) 06:28, 28 June 2021 (UTC)

    Not done No source(s) given. Note this is being discussed at WP:FTN#The danger of the spike protein in RNA vaccines, according to … their inventor?. Also, note WP:COI. Alexbrn (talk) 06:38, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
    Adding a source [1] which references the original mouse research which was removed. Even if the reference to Dr. Robert Malone is removed that is no reason to delete the history sections referring to that research. Caprilyc (talk) 17:18, 28 June 2021 (UTC)


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Fringe_theories/Noticeboard#The_danger_of_the_spike_protein_in_RNA_vaccines,_according_to_%E2%80%A6_their_inventor?

    Robert Malone is an individual who has appeared on social media to (as this Reuters fact check puts it) say that the spike protein as used in several COVID vaccines is "very dangerous" and "cytotoxic". He styles himself and is referred to in such forums as the "inventor of mRNA vaccines".[25]

    Over at RNA vaccine#History there has been repeated editing trying to get this "inventor" characterisation into Wikipedia, despite apparently there being no suitble WP:RS for it. While there is no doubt Malone was a scientist publishing early work in this field (see here) for example, his role does not even seem to have been so much that he is even named in historical overviews of the topic, in contrast to - say - Katalin Karikó.
    Alexbrn (talk) 08:52, 25 June 2021 (UTC)

    The main issue with Malone is there aren't any reliable sources that discuss him in detail or the merits of his claim to have "invented" mRNA vaccines, though I see the Daily Mail and Fox News have uncritically parroted his claims. Hemiauchenia (talk) 08:56, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
    "According to his company website, he designed and developed in-vivo transfection experiments that led to numerous publications and over 10 patents on mRNA vaccination.
    However, the claim that he’s the inventor of the mRNA vaccine technology underlying the covid jab is not widely accepted by independent researchers documenting the intellectual property landscape of this discovery."[26]
    The best source for claims of who invented mRNA vaccines appears to be "A network analysis of COVID-19 mRNA vaccine patents" in Nature Biotechnology[27][28] Especially interesting: [29]. --Guy Macon (talk) 15:56, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
    Related: Fact Check: COVID-19 vaccines are not 'cytotoxic' --Reuters Fact Check
    --Guy Macon (talk) 16:00, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
    Is this a dispute about how to accurately label his involvement? If so, perhaps it would be more accurate to describe him as “one of the scientists who’s work directly led to the vaccine” or something similar. Or is the dispute more about what he says? Blueboar (talk) 16:07, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
    I don't think the sources even go quite that far. They cite some early work (for which he was one of several authors), showing that there was some kind of possible therapeutic potential for mRNA. That's what the article more or less currently says, but there's been a push to single him out and name him as a figure, when the sources don't. Alexbrn (talk) 16:12, 25 June 2021 (UTC)
    Professor Francois Balloux tweeted earlier today: (Malone) presents himself as the 'Inventor of mRNA vaccines and RNA as a drug'. I presume his claim is based on being a middle author on 3 fairly well-cited publications from the nineties on DNA/RNA expression vectors (104, 28, and 27 citations this year on Google Scholar). Schazjmd (talk) 22:43, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
    The other side of the story: Malone documents why he makes the claim of inventing mRNA vaccines. Schazjmd (talk) 16:18, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
    (archive link [30]) —PaleoNeonate – 04:43, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
    Yeah, mRNA vaccines are not just RNA transfection. That's a gross over-simplification. This man also did not invent nucleic acid transfection. Mark Danielsen and Philip Felgner did that at Syntex Research in 1987.[1] This guy was just a middle author on a few papers that used this same tech with RNA in 1990. I would describe him more as a patent troll than an inventor, personally.--Shibbolethink (♔ ♕) 16:37, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
    So they can keep their legal battle going, but it's of course inappropriate to use Wikipedia as a PR platform... When independent reliable sources report about that, it may be possible to cover the process or results... —PaleoNeonate – 04:39, 29 June 2021 (UTC)


    TL;DR; Lidi, kteri nejsou vedci, se divali do textu kolem historie COVID vakciny, a toho typka tam nevideli, a byl tam na wiki zminen az moc hodne, tak to zredukovali na nulu. Jeho jmeno radeji nahradili jmenem firmy, pro kterou pracoval.
    Zpochybnuji, ze jeho praci lze pouvazovat za vakcinu

    https://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=/netahtml/PTO/srchnum.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&d=PALL&s1=5589466.PN.
    Induction of a protective immune response in a mammal by injecting a DNA sequence

    Abstract
    A method for delivering an isolated polynucleotide such as DNA or RNA, to the interior of a cell in a mammal comprising the injection of an isolated polynucleotide into a muscle of the mammal where the polynucleotide is taken up by the cells of the muscle and exerts a therapeutic effect on the mammal. The method can be used to deliver a therapeutic polypeptide to the cells of the mammal, to provide an immune response upon in vivo translation of the polynucleotide, to deliver antisense polynucleotides, to deliver receptors to the cells of the mammal or to provide transitory gene therapy.


    Tohle neni vakcina? No on je to spis chytak, protoze on tady mluvi o genove terapii. Ani COVID vakciny nejsou ve skutecnosti vakcina. Vakcina obsahuje virus, ne ze se genovou terapii vytvori nejaka jeho cast sama v tele.
    Jeho prace zjevne byla pak rozvinuta tou Madarkou, ktera mela udajne vyresit problem nejake prehnane defensivni reakce imunitniho systemu na tu vakcinu. Resila problem, o kterem byla akademicka komunita skepticka a dlouha leta jeji praci zamitali publikovat. Tuhle zminku z wiki smazali samozrejme. Ale o tom to zrejme je. BIONTECH/Moderna .. vyrobce rozjel sen vyrabet vakciny pro lidi, a udajne vyresili ten problem. No je aby.

    Kazdopadne zaujatost je tam zrejma. Pribeh je hodne podobny jako u vynalezce PCR testu, ktery razantne kritizoval, aby byly pouzivane pro diagnostiku.
    Ze neco tvrdi pionyri v oblasti, jeste neznamena, ze maji pravdu, nicmene ta snaha jejich podil marginalizovat, jakmile se stanou kontroverznimi , je fakt strapna.

    Malone sam tvrdi, ze neni proti konceptu mRNA vakciny, ale ze mu vadi tyhle konkretni, ale fanatikum nelze vysvetlit. Stejne jako nejde verit jen trochu v Jezise.. jen trochu v Pana. Clovek musi verit plne ve vsem, jinak je stale hrisnikem.
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Inventor of mRNA Vaccine Technology - Dr Robert Malone
    https://odysee.com/@TruthWillOut:8/Inventor-of-mRNA-Dr-Robert-Malone:8?
    RIVA
    RIVA --- ---
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    Moderna hits safety problems in bold bid to reinvent medicine
    https://www.statnews.com/2017/01/10/moderna-trouble-mrna/

    SAN FRANCISCO — Moderna Therapeutics, the most highly valued private company in biotech, has run into troubling safety problems with its most ambitious therapy, STAT has learned — and is now banking on a mysterious new technology to keep afloat its brash promise of reinventing modern medicine.

    Exactly one year ago, Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel talked up his company’s “unbelievable” future before a standing-room-only crowd at the annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference here. He promised that Moderna’s treatment for a rare and debilitating disease known as Crigler-Najjar syndrome, developed alongside biotech giant Alexion Pharmaceuticals, would enter human trials in 2016.

    It was to be the first therapy using audacious new technology that Bancel promised would yield dozens of drugs in the coming decade.


    But the Crigler-Najjar treatment has been indefinitely delayed, an Alexion spokeswoman told STAT. It never proved safe enough to test in humans, according to several former Moderna employees and collaborators who worked closely on the project. Unable to press forward with that technology, Moderna has had to focus instead on developing a handful of vaccines, turning to a less lucrative field that might not justify the company’s nearly $5 billion valuation.

    “It’s all vaccines right now, and vaccines are a loss-leader,” said one former Moderna manager. “Moderna right now is a multibillion-dollar vaccines company, and I don’t see how that holds up.”

    Bancel made no mention of the Crigler-Najjar drug when he spoke Monday before a similarly packed room at this year’s J.P. Morgan conference.

    Related: Ego, ambition, and turmoil: Inside one of biotech’s most secretive startups
    His presentation instead focused on four vaccines that the company is moving through the first phase of clinical trials: two target strains of influenza, a third is for Zika virus, and the fourth remains a secret. Bancel clicked through graphs of data from animal studies before hurrying on to tout Moderna’s balance sheet and discuss the company’s cancer vaccines, slated for clinical testing later this year.

    When STAT asked Bancel after the presentation about Crigler-Najjar, he deferred to Alexion.

    In need of a Hail Mary
    Founded in 2012, Moderna reached unicorn status — a $1 billion valuation — in just two years, faster than Uber, Dropbox, and Lyft, according to CB Insights. The company’s premise: Using custom-built strands of messenger RNA, known as mRNA, it aims to turn the body’s cells into ad hoc drug factories, compelling them to produce the proteins needed to treat a wide variety of diseases.

    But mRNA is a tricky technology. Several major pharmaceutical companies have tried and abandoned the idea, struggling to get mRNA into cells without triggering nasty side effects.

    Bancel has repeatedly promised that Moderna’s new therapies will change the world, but the company has refused to publish any data on its mRNA vehicles, sparking skepticism from some scientists and a chiding from the editors of Nature.

    The indefinite delay on the Crigler-Najjar project signals persistent and troubling safety concerns for any mRNA treatment that needs to be delivered in multiple doses, covering almost everything that isn’t a vaccine, former employees and collaborators said.

    The company did disclose a new technology on Monday that it says will more safely deliver mRNA. It’s called V1GL. Last month, Bancel told Forbes about another new technology, N1GL.

    But in neither case has the company provided any details. And that lack of specificity has inevitably raised questions.

    Three former employees and collaborators close to the process said Moderna was always toiling away on new delivery technologies in hopes of hitting on something safer than what it had. (Even Bancel has acknowledged, in an interview with Forbes, that the delivery method used in Moderna’s first vaccines “was not very good.”)

    Related: One brash idea to save the drug industry — and (maybe) make a few billion dollars
    Are N1GL and V1GL better? The company has produced no data to answer that question. When STAT asked about new technologies, Bancel referred questions to the company’s patent filings.

    The three former employees and collaborators said they believe N1GL and V1GL are either very recent discoveries, just in the earliest stages of testing — or else new names slapped on technologies Moderna has owned for years.

    “[The technology] would have to be a miraculous, Hail Mary sort of save for them to get to where they need to be on their timelines,” one former employee said. “Either [Bancel] is extremely confident that it’s going to work, or he’s getting kind of jittery that with a lack of progress he needs to put something out there.”

    Former employees and collaborators who spoke with STAT requested anonymity because they had signed nondisclosure agreements — which the highly secretive Moderna requires even some job candidates to sign.

    A STAT investigation last year found that Bancel had driven away top talent from Moderna with a culture of recrimination and a caustic work environment, including on-the-spot firings for failed experiments.

    The company, based in Cambridge, Mass., seems to have repaired its reputation among many rank-and-file employees, winning workplace accolades from Science Magazine and the Boston Globe, but Moderna has lost more than a dozen top scientists and managers in the past four years, despite its vast financial resources.

    A bug in the software
    Bancel, a first-time biotech CEO, has dismissed questions about Moderna’s potential. He describes mRNA as a simple way to develop treatments for scores of ailments. As he told STAT over the summer, “mRNA is like software: You can just turn the crank and get a lot of products going into development.”

    It seems clear, however, that the software has run into bugs.

    Patients with Crigler-Najjar are missing a key liver enzyme needed to break down bilirubin, a yellowish substance that crops up in the body as old red blood cells break down. Without that enzyme, bilirubin proliferates in the blood, leading to jaundice, muscle degeneration, and even brain damage.

    In Moderna’s eyes, the one-in-million disease looked like an ideal candidate for mRNA therapy. The company crafted a string of mRNA that would encode for the missing enzyme, believing it had hit upon an excellent starting point to prove technology could be used to treat rare diseases.

    But things gradually came apart last year.

    Every drug has what’s called a therapeutic window, the scientific sweet spot where a treatment is powerful enough to have an effect on a disease but not so strong as to put patients at too much risk. For mRNA, that has proved elusive.

    In order to protect mRNA molecules from the body’s natural defenses, drug developers must wrap them in a protective casing. For Moderna, that meant putting its Crigler-Najjar therapy in nanoparticles made of lipids. And for its chemists, those nanoparticles created a daunting challenge: Dose too little, and you don’t get enough enzyme to affect the disease; dose too much, and the drug is too toxic for patients.

    From the start, Moderna’s scientists knew that using mRNA to spur protein production would be a tough task, so they scoured the medical literature for diseases that might be treated with just small amounts of additional protein.

    “And that list of diseases is very, very short,” said the former employee who described Bancel as needing a Hail Mary.

    Crigler-Najjar was the lowest-hanging fruit.

    Yet Moderna could not make its therapy work, former employees and collaborators said. The safe dose was too weak, and repeat injections of a dose strong enough to be effective had troubling effects on the liver in animal studies.

    The drug, ALXN1540, has since been delayed, as Moderna works on “new and better formulations” that might later reach human trials, Alexion said in an emailed statement.

    A huge valuation but a modest pipeline
    The failure in its first and most advanced therapy casts doubt on Moderna’s other goals for the rare disease space.

    It also calls into question Moderna’s valuation, pegged at $4.7 billion by Pitchbook. The company has raised nearly $2 billion in cash from investors and partners. But it has done so by promising a revolutionary technology safe enough to deliver repeated doses of mRNA.

    The drugs it is pushing along now, by contrast, are more modest, relying on single administrations of mRNA. Beyond the four vaccines, it has one early-stage clinical trial targeting cardiac disease, launched just last month by partner AstraZeneca. The treatment involves a one-time dose and doesn’t use the tricky nanoparticle casing.

    Vaccines are not nearly as lucrative as the rare disease space that Moderna hoped to dominate. The market is also much more crowded; at least seven Zika vaccines, for instance, are either in clinical testing or are expected to enter testing by next fall.

    Related: What’s behind those billion-dollar biotech deals? Often, a whole lot of hype
    Moderna has about $1.3 billion in cash on hand, according to Bancel. But with plans to spend more than $300 million a year investing in its technology, it will need to raise more money eventually. The most logical step would be to go public, and last year Moderna reorganized its business to prepare for an initial public offering.

    But at its current valuation, Moderna’s IPO would be the biggest in biotech history, leaving some investors scratching their heads as to how the company’s vaccine-heavy pipeline could justify such a number. If Moderna chooses to stay private, it’s unclear whether it can raise more cash without resorting to a dreaded down round, in which new shares are sold at a price below the last ones.

    Until Moderna demonstrates that its technology can safely treat a disease, those questions will be tough to answer.

    “My friends ask if they are like Theranos, and I say no; I think it’s a real idea,” one former Moderna collaborator said. “The question is how well does it work.”

    Bancel isn’t providing the data that could answer that. But he projects unbounded confidence.

    “I’m sure that five years from now we’ll look at 2017 as the inflection point that Moderna went for a liftoff,” he said at Monday’s presentation. “We have a chance to transform medicine, and we won’t quit until we are done and we have impacted patients.”

    // Myslim, ze je intelektualne necestne tvrdit, ze "COVID vakciny" jsou vakciny. Midwiti si delaji srandu z pochybujicich, protoze prej vedi hovno, ale kazdy prece vime, ze princip vakciny je, ze obsahuje mrtvy virus. COVID vakcina je prokazatelne genova terapie, ktera me simulovat princip vakciny., ale je to neco uplne jineho. Pak je samozrejme velice hloupe to srovnavat s vakcinou proti obrne apod. Ze ne kazdy chce podstoupit genovou terapii bez dostatecne dlouhe faze testovani, je zcela logicke.
    Vrcholem absurdity je pak, kdyz nejaky Babis nebo jiny politik rozhoduje, jestli se vakcina naredi, nebo posune/oddali davka. To je ukazkova technokracie.
    Nabizi se srovnani s rokem 1901, kdy zacala povinna sterilizace lidi na zaklade socialne darwinisticke hygieny. Az ted po 100 letech vime, ze cela akademicka komunita se pletla, a veda za tim stojici byla kompletni BS.
    GORG
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    mRNA VACCINE INVENTOR CALLS FOR STOP OF COVID VAX - The Highwire
    https://thehighwire.com/videos/mrna-vaccine-inventor-calls-for-stop-of-covid-vax

    Dr. Robert Malone, inventor of the mRNA vaccine, sits down with Del to give his honest concerns about why this is the wrong technology to use against #Covid19 and, in particular, the extreme danger it poses to young people.

    https://news.yahoo.com/single-most-qualified-mrna-expert-173600060.html

    The man who invented the mRNA technology used in some coronavirus vaccines says he was censored by YouTube for sharing his concerns on the vaccines in a podcast.

    "[O]ne of my concerns are that the government is not being transparent with us about what those risks are. And so, I'm of the opinion that people have the right to decide whether to accept a vaccine or not, especially since these are experimental vaccines," said Dr. Robert Malone during a Wednesday segment on Fox News's Tucker Carlson Tonight, saying YouTube deleted a video of him speaking about the associated risks.

    Opening the segment, Carlson shared some studies showing heart inflammation and death correlating with the use of the vaccines.

    "A Norwegian study conducted of 100 nursing home residents who died after receiving Pfizer's corona shots. They found that at least 10 of those deaths were likely caused by the vaccine. 10%," Carlson said.

    JOHN MCAFEE FOUND DEAD IN SPANISH PRISON CELL

    "Young adults in the prime of their lives are being forced to take the vaccine because Tony Fauci said that," he said, contending Malone’s expertise makes him "the single most qualified" person to share information about the technology and warrants him "a right to speak."

    Malone clarified that he was not discouraging the use of the vaccine but was providing people with as much fair information as he could about their risks.

    "This is a fundamental right having to do with clinical research ethics," he said. "And so, my concern is that I know that there are risks. But we don't have access to the data, and the data haven't been captured rigorously enough so that we can accurately assess those risks — and therefore … we don't really have the information that we need to make a reasonable decision."

    "That's one of my other objections, is that we toss about these words, risk-benefit analysis, casually as if it's a very deep science. It's not. Normally, at this stage, the CDC [Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices] would have performed those risk-benefit analyses. They would be data-based and science-based. They're not right now," Malone said.


    Malone also said he has "a bias that the benefits probably don't outweigh the risks" for younger people who are being encouraged or required to take the vaccine.

    "I can say that the risk-benefit ratio for those 18 and below doesn't justify vaccines, and there's a pretty good chance that it doesn't justify vaccination in these very young adults," he added.

    Malone discovered in-vitro and in-vivo RNA transfection when he was at the Salk Institute in 1988, and he subsequently invented mRNA vaccines, which are being used over 20 years later to combat the spread of the coronavirus.

    YouTube told the Washington Examiner of the video that while it is "open [to] discussions of potential treatments and clinical trials related to COVID-19 on YouTube, based on guidance from the CDC, FDA and other local health authorities, we don’t currently allow content that recommends Ivermectin as an effective treatment or prevention method for the virus."

    "As such, we removed content from Bret Weinstein's channels that violated this policy. We craft our policies to prevent the risk of egregious real-world harm, and update them as official guidance evolves. We do allow exceptions to our policy about Ivermectin, including content that also gives viewers the full context of the FDA’s current position."


    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC297778/
    Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1989 Aug; 86(16): 6077–6081.
    doi: 10.1073/pnas.86.16.6077
    PMCID: PMC297778
    PMID: 2762315
    Cationic liposome-mediated RNA transfection.
    R W Malone, P L Felgner, and I M Verma
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    The Deficiencies of Sinophobia, Bannon & the End of Geopolitics — Strategic Culture
    https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2021/06/28/the-deficiencies-of-sinophobia-bannon-the-end-of-geopolitics/
    TLUSTEI
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    RIVA: Hustý. Je snad jasný, že tak "zanedbatelná" statistika se zřejmě na přední stránky Tajmsů nikdy nedostane.
    RIVA
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    Tak to vypadá že ten malý sexy skandálek a následná (rychlá) rezignace britského tajemníka pro zdravotnictví a sociální péči, Matta Hancocka, je jen vhodnou (nutnou) zástěrkou pro v sobotu vydané prohlášení NHS England (Národního Zdravotního Servisu) o úmrtnosti očkovaných na tzv. Delta (Indickou) variantu.

    Whilst you’ve been distracted by Hancock’s affair, PHE released a report revealing 62% of alleged Covid deaths are people who’ve been vaccinated – Daily Expose
    https://dailyexpose.co.uk/2021/06/26/whilst-youve-been-distracted-by-hancocks-affair-phe-released-a-report-revealing-62-of-alleged-covid-deaths-are-people-whove-been-vaccinated/
    RIVA
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    A “Leap” toward Humanity’s Destruction - unlimitedhangout.com
    https://unlimitedhangout.com/2021/06/investigative-reports/a-leap-toward-humanitys-destruction/

    Whitney Webb Interview – Their “Wellcome Leap” Toward Transhumanism & Why You’re Now A “Terrorist”
    https://www.thelastamericanvagabond.com/whitney-webb-interview-their-wellcome-leap-toward-transhumanism-why-youre-now-a-terrorist/
    GORG
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    Genetically Engineered Meat Intolerance to Fight Climate Change?
    https://www.bitchute.com/video/djHu6DglMIez
    GORG
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    TA3 MUDr. Andrej Janco povedal pravdu o experimentálnej vakcinácii proti COVID 19
    https://www.vimo.sk/watch/hZIxgendTONzwr5
    RIVA
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    RIVA
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    A Thread from @ThreadsIrish: "1. Do You Want To See Some More Predictive Programming Prior To Covid ? (Part 2) If you enjoyed Part 1 [...]"
    https://threader.app/thread/1398217493789872129
    RIVA
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    Jeffrey Tambor explains the N.W.O. and the Trilateral Commission on Barney Miller in 1981
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fv6w_ys5sJo
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