Planned?
No, stumbled into by experts for love of money, power, and beliefs in one's omniscience and omnipotence
Obviously the hotdog in the photo should be a hypodermic! (not much into Photoshop...anyone care to give it a whirl?)
Please have a read of Jessica Rose's latest Substack. It is quite technical, which it must necessarily be, but lucidly explained so anyone with a smattering of the sciences in his educational background can at a minimum get the drift:
Dr. Rose concludes:
On other disease associations with epigenetic factors
Bacterial infections are connected to epigenetics as well.22 23 I mean, literally, everything is on the list of epigenetic factors associated with disease. Everything. I am just going to list some of them with a single reference each.
Asthma24, Hematologic malignancies25, Alzheimer’s26, Sperm motility27, Chronic lymphocytic leukemia28, Myocardial injury29 and cardiac hypertrophy30, Autism31, Frontal fibrosing alopecia32, Diabetic Kidney Disease33, Autoimmune conditions (in general - there are MANY)34, Cancer35, COVID-1936 ... ruh roh
On solutions
Stop injecting yourselves with products with undisclosed ingredients that I, personally, am absolutely sure contain epigenetic factors causing all of the above, including cancer, by epigenetic modification.
One of the comments, with Jessica Rose's reply:
“I, personally, am absolutely sure [undisclosed ingredients] contain epigenetic factors causing all of the above, including cancer, by epigenetic modification.”
Dr Rose: do you believe this was intentional? If so, why was this done?
Dr. Rose replied:
In my opinion, it would had to have been intentional, based on the PRRA furin cleavage site. It basically couldn't get in there on its own (12 simultaneous nt mutations at once in sequence? paaalease.) and it makes this stupid sars-2 thing more infectious and releases spike into the circulation. Spike does a lot of damage as is being documented copiously in peer-reviewed literature.
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Naturally harboring the widely-derided opinion that no small number of the "experts" in this world are on the brink of having their life's work nullified by impending scientific revolutions that may yet take some time to materialize, I have several times here on Substack attempted to deflate the paranoia of those who see in the plandemic a "green baize table" strategy by some deep clique of "experts" to depopulate the planet, the kind of plan only a James Bond could defeat. The expertise required for actually being the bad guy(s) of such film extravaganzas is simply not within human capabilities, no matter how advanced are the technological resources employed.
I will nevertheless add a little disclaimer:
I am not eminently qualified to judge the case definitively, but I am super-suspicious that the competence that would have been required to design and manufacture the perfect artificial virus, with just the right disease characteristics (not all that dangerous but enough so as to convince the public and their governments that the threat was real and could not be ignored) and to also design and manufacture its perfect antidote that would sell a $trillion worth of jabs... and actually bring the disease to a halt... such competence never existed. If it had! Imagine!! The new mRNA technology would have brought us a shot for our every complaint, to be repeated twice yearly from here to eternity!
Well, They tried hard, yes, but the result is a disaster, and they knew the disaster was coming. But they were locked into a strategy of make-money-quickly-enough-to-save-BigPharma-from-meltdown
and
...and a once-begun, then unavoidable chain of events that could not but end tragically. It took VeryBigBucks of R&D, thousands of patents, clandestine labs, bribes, coercions and offers-they-couldn't-refuse, and much more time than they would have liked to get the product bottled. Clinical trials?? "We don't have time!! What the hell, let's Fake It!! The stuff'll probably work, at least to some degree", and thus was the new mRNA technology irrevocably launched so that BigPharma could bask in at least a few more years of DJIA and Nasdaq "growth". "In case of unforeseen problems, we'll have enough cash and "influence" to prevent any bad press that could disappoint investors."
A textbook example of how end-stage, meltdown capitalism works in practice.
One telling example (among many) that BigPharma was in a BigRush and knew its clinical trials program was a sham (for it was designed to be so): If they had known in advance just how "safe" or dangerous the mRNA miracle might be, then the shots would not have been released in various dosage strengths. We see quite convincingly that they were still trying to find out, and trying to sell as many shots as possible before too much damage was done, if damage there was to be. And surely if their "expertise" was even close to the myth, they would have made the shot much less visibly disastrous even if one of the goals was some degree of population reduction via fertility decline, or even outright murder. The ideal jab would not have caused so many horrible side-effects, so many on-camera and on-the-sports-field collapses, so many obvious signs of vax culpability in postmortem exams, and surely not so quickly as has been the case. Controlling the bad press was for a time quite easy, lessons learned long ago when nightly TV-broadcast carnage about Vietnam made even middle America sit up in disgust. Another lesson was the necessity of silencing whistle-blowers (Ellsberg then, you-know-who now). That was the easy part. But silencing the real experts is proving to be their undoing.
In short, there was a grand-canyon-wide deficit in competence that prevented success, whatever that "success" was actually supposed to consist of, and so we have been duped into participation in a crowd madness of record proportions by A Confederacy of Dunces, albeit some very clever ones who were nevertheless glaringly lacking in wisdom and moral rectitude.
The same characteristics and results so often seen in so many human enterprises: Vast plans with half-vast abilities to estimate the long term consequences of those plans... nothing new, sadly.
"Confederacy of Dunces" is hysterical! It's been so long since I've read it, I've forgotten the details, but thank you for reminding me about it. Maybe one day, I'll have time to indulge in some recreational reading again.