Investigate Earth Conspiracy Podcast - Monkey Escape From Bio Lab in South Carolina | Fauci Connection

Episode Date: November 11, 2024

In this episode, we dive into the alarming story of 43 monkeys escaping from a bio-research lab in Yemassee, South Carolina from the Alpha Genesis facility. How dangerous is this incident for local re...sidents and the general public? And why are there multiple facilities across South Carolina—like the mysterious Morgan Island, known as "Monkey Island," inhabited only by monkeys—housing these animals in captivity? We also uncover a surprising connection: Dr. Anthony Fauci and the NIH play a major role in funding these facilities. Join us as we explore the risks, the mysteries, and the implications of this unusual situation.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:30 and welcome to Investigator Podcast. I'm your host chat alongside my beautiful wife, Sherry. On tonight's episode, we're going to be talking about escaped monkeys right here in our home state of South Carolina. These monkeys, 43 of them, to be exact, escaped an Alpha Genesis Incorporated lab, which is a prominent primate research and breeding facility located in Yemisee, South Carolina. Now, so far, as of the recording of this episode, there have been 25 monkeys captured with the rest of them still at large. There was one originally captured when the monkeys first escaped, but it's interesting because as we kind of go through this, obviously the big question here is what are they testing on these
Starting point is 00:01:09 monkeys? What type of diseases are in this lab right here in South Carolina? And are there other labs similar? Then also we're going to talk about what are some of the names that have been connected with either this facility, these monkeys? Well, many of you might remember Dr. Anthony Falci. You know what the left in the media wanted to say was, a hero of COVID-19, although that's complete lies.
Starting point is 00:01:32 It seems like he was the liar of COVID-19 and in large part heavily contributed to the fact that COVID-19 even existed. And we're talking about him along with Ralph Barrett and North Carolina, Dr. Ralph Barrett. So we feel like this is definitely a story we have to talk about because as we've moved past COVID-19 and the whole argument about gain of function, which is how do you create a zoonotic virus and make it infect people more easily and make it more deadly for humans. Most people kind of forgot about that. And I think that these monkeys escaping, at the very least, we need to do something for the
Starting point is 00:02:08 fact that they escaped. And I think we need to bring awareness to what's actually still going on in this country, in labs everywhere. Absolutely. And this lab is a pretty big lab. They have over 40,000 monkeys in this lab. And out of those monkeys, there's over 400 monkeys being tested annually. Dang. And so that's true. And so Alpha Genesis, just so everyone understands, it is a research and breeding facility, which is located in Yemisee, South Carolina. They're specializing in care, breeding, and scientific use of primates. Mainly recess monkeys, the facility plays a significant role in providing non-human primates for research purposes in the United States. Now, its mission revolves around advancing biomedical research, drug discovery, and various scientific studies that benefit human and animal health.
Starting point is 00:02:56 However, AGI is also a topic of public interest and concern due to ethical debates surrounding the use of animals in research. Bounded in early 2000s, AGI has grown to house thousands of primates in its South Carolina facility. And this lab collaborates with research institutions, universities, pharmaceutical companies, across the country supplying animals and supporting services for research on diseases, pharmaceuticals, and other medical interventions. Now, primate research has been instrumental in medical advancement. advancements contributing to the development of vaccines, treatments for infectious disease, and understanding neurological and genetic conditions. So AGI is structured to meet stringent regulatory standards, they say, operating under the
Starting point is 00:03:40 guidance of the United States Department of Agriculture, or USDA, and a National Institute of Health, which is Anthony Fauci's organization, and ensuring compliance with the Animal Welfare Act. The facility has an in-house team of veterinarians and animal care specialists dedicated to maintaining animal welfare standards, though they often face scrutiny for many animal rights organizations and the public. So I want to go ahead and get into the main story from live now from Fox, where they interview a local reporter to the area from the island packet and just kind of listen to how the interview goes and think about it in your head.
Starting point is 00:04:17 What are some of the questions maybe I would have asked if I would have been a reporter versus what was actually asked and talked about? Here you go. Take a look at this video right here as the search does continue for 43 monkeys bred for medical research that escaped from a compound in South Carolina. Police here about an hour outside of Savannah, Georgia say the monkeys made a break for it Wednesday from the Alpha Genesis facility. And the video actually shows the monkeys nearby. You can see them in the distance there, kind of run by in the middle of your screen. Now, they're all females and are the size of a cat weighing about seven pounds. All of them bred to sell to medical and other researchers.
Starting point is 00:04:59 Police say they've been seen exploring the outer fence of the compound, cooing at the monkeys that are still inside. Authorities in the town are recommending people who live within a mile from downtown, keep their windows and doors closed and call 911 if they see the monkeys, but do not approach them. However, they also add the monkeys pose no risk. to public health. A lot to discuss, so I do want to bring in Chloe Appleby, a reporter at the Island Packet, who covers news there over in South Carolina. Thank you so much for taking the time
Starting point is 00:05:31 to join us here and talk about all of this. Thank you, Josh. I appreciate the time. Of course. Well, first off, I want to kind of get your reaction. You received the information that this has happened. 43 monkeys have escaped from this compound. What's the first thing that's going through your mind? I mean, as you can imagine, it was pretty much a shock to all of us. We received a notification around 8 p.m. on Wednesday evening. And again, this was after Tuesday when we were covering local elections. So kind of a crazy week already to start. But we received the notification that basically had the headline of escaped primates in Yemisee. And of course, our initial reaction as reporters is, oh my gosh, we need to figure out more. We have so many questions. Our minds just
Starting point is 00:06:16 fill with questions naturally. And this is honestly just part of part of the job is having these unique and kind of sometimes wild stories you have to chase. So I think our initial reaction as a newsroom was just we need to figure out what's going on here and help to answer some of the questions that are happening here. Can you explain where the monkeys actually escaped from? And at this point, do police really have an idea of how they were able to escape? Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:44 So the monkeys did escape from a really. research facility, research and breeding facility, rather, in Yemisee known as Alpha Genesis. And locally, people call this the monkey farm. So it's well known to the community that it is there. And they escaped around 9 p.m. on Wednesday, as I've mentioned. And the reason for this, Josh, we've learned, is that it was a human error. Forty-three of a 50 monkey group escaped from an enclosure when an employee doing kind of routine cleaning and feeding failed to secure two doors behind her, which did lead to the monkeys escape. We've got this video that you're looking at on the left hand side of your screen there that kind of shows some of the sightings there.
Starting point is 00:07:31 So if police kind of narrowed down exactly where they are? Yeah. So from our conversations with the town administrator and from releases that we've seen from the MSE Police Department, We do know that the monkeys are actually sticking close to the exterior perimeter of the facility. They've been heard cooing back and forth with the monkeys inside of the facility. So they are sticking close by. Their hope, Alpha Genesis's hope, is to lure the monkeys back in naturally. They are kind of trying to lure them in with snacks and food and hoping that they miss their comrades on the other side of the fence enough to come back naturally. But in worst case scenario, there is the possibility of using a tranquilizing dart to get them back.
Starting point is 00:08:21 But they're hoping they just come back naturally and that they just miss their monkeys enough to join them again. There's been a lot of talk about this. The stories being shared all over social media with that video that you were just looking at. So I kind of want to get your take on what it's like in the town right now. What are people saying? Are they concerned? Or is it more, I guess, amusing to some people. Right. So we actually had the opportunity to go into Yemisee Thursday morning. So it was a really rainy day in Yemisee, and we were able to speak with some of the people there. And I think the overall take is this is not actually a new event in Yemisee. There have been other escapes prior. There have actually been two in the last decade. So this is not entirely new to the people who have been living in Yemisee for quite some time. The overall take,
Starting point is 00:09:14 was just let them roam. They'll come back when they're ready. There was not over-concern about this. The police did ask for residents to close their windows and doors, but that was only really precautionary, I believe. So residents are not overly worried about the situation. Yemisee. A lot of folks haven't necessarily heard of it. So can you explain where the town's located and, you know, who lives there, that sort of thing? Sure. So Yemisee is a small town in the low country of South Carolina. For folks who know Bufurt, South Carolina, Yemasee is just 25 miles north of that. It's a 16 square mile town split between Bufurt and Hampton counties. But again, it's really just a small town in the low country. They're known for a yearly shrimp festival there. And actually, Alpha Genesis is one of the major employers. of the town, but just really good, good low country town. What do we know about Alpha Genesis? As you said, it's one of the major employers.
Starting point is 00:10:25 Yeah, so I think this is a question that a lot of people have had over the past few days. You know, who are these people? What are, what is their purpose? And one of our reporter, one of our reporters, Carl Puckett, was actually able to get to the, to the bottom of this by speaking to the CEO of AlphaGenesis. And their primary purpose is a breeding facility. And they provide primates to pharmaceutical companies for disease research. So there is some testing that happens within the facility, but mostly it's a breeding facility. And interestingly enough, there's actually three different areas that they manage throughout
Starting point is 00:11:03 the low country when it comes to monkeys. So there's the one that we've all had our eyes on in Yemise. and they manage around 4,000 monkeys there, so a lot. And then just north, five miles north is a second facility where they manage 3,000 monkeys. And then there's an island north of St. Helena Island, still included within Beaufort County, called Morgan Island. And it's actually locally known as Monkey Island, because if you go by in a boat, you can see monkeys kind of hanging from the trees. But they help to manage about 3,000 monkeys there as well. So throughout the low country, it's about 10,000 monkeys.
Starting point is 00:11:38 And a fun fact about Yemasee, too, is that there are actually more monkeys living in the town than people. So just a kind of small fact about Yemasee as well. All right. So that was the local report from Fox Live now with the Island Packet. And they're talking about here. Some of the things obviously that stood out to me was no risk to public health. You have a research facility like this that has these primates inside that when we get into some of the other stuff that we're about to talk about in a minute, especially with this organization that knows. a lot about what happens around the,
Starting point is 00:12:11 um, uh, these primates and these facilities and some of these research labs, but no risk to public health. I'm just surprised they just said, you know, and maybe the monkeys were not affected with anything necessarily, but how they kind of downplayed everything was pretty interesting to me.
Starting point is 00:12:25 Research and breeding facility. They say they are primarily a breeding facility, although she did just say, well, there is some testing that gets done there. So it seems like another way to downplay what they actually do in this facility in South Carolina. and I'm just surprised that the media here in this situation did not ask anything about what they were actually being tested for or on, etc.
Starting point is 00:12:46 Well, they are definitely tested for drug testing and disease testing, but I was going through their data. And it went back from 2017 and it kind of tells how many animals they test each year. And 2017 to 2019, it was approximately 400 monkeys being tested every year. then 2020 was skipped. There was no data at all. And then 2021, it went all the way up to 500 monkeys being tested at the facility. I was just flabbergasted. Like, where's the numbers for 2020? Because if you think about 2020, you think about what? Yeah, COVID. That's right when COVID started. Yeah, for sure. And so I just thought that was crazy because they're obviously trying to hide those numbers. Well, and also you have to remember during 2020 and then especially 2021, 2021, when Dr. Anthony Fulci started coming into some of these congressional hearings. And so he was being grilled on what are you involved in? Where's the money coming from?
Starting point is 00:13:46 Where is it going? How much are you researching gain in function research? How much are you playing with deadly viruses like we have talked about or seen in movies even? And, you know, obviously Anthony Falsci with Rand Paul and many other congressmen and senators have grilled him on this. this and he has continued to lie to Congress. He's continued to lie to our government, and he's basically faced no consequences for this whatsoever so far. And so my opinion on this is maybe 2020 was skipped because maybe once we kind of go into how much the NIH and the NAID actually has involvement with this facility, you'll understand probably why they skipped this because
Starting point is 00:14:25 he probably knew that he was about to go in Congress. He was about to go in all these places. So he said, stop everything right now. We don't know. Or just don't give us the data. I don't know. There's something up without them. And obviously, I feel like they have way too monkeys that they're taking care of because I went through the complaints that have been filed just with this company.
Starting point is 00:14:44 And alone, like she said, they have had monkeys escaped two times prior to this. But the difference between those escapes and now is they had the monkeys back in within 24 hours. Now, they say that these are all young female monkeys that have not to be. been tested or nothing's wrong with them. But I ask, why are they telling you to shut your doors, shut your windows and be careful and be on the lookout of them? I don't know if they don't have diseases. Why should you be worried? But also, I was learning about the other complaints and they've had several monkeys die from dehydration. They've had monkeys that have been strangled because of improper equipment. They've had monkeys that have got extension cords into their cages, just all kinds of
Starting point is 00:15:28 complaints. And did what with them? I don't know. They just, they grabbed the extension cords and print them into their cages. But these are all complaints that have been filed with this company. And I feel like it's just because they have too many monkeys they're taking care of. Yeah, for sure. Well, at Alpha Genesis, too, research primarily studies diseases and medical conditions
Starting point is 00:15:47 that have significant implications for human health, they say. They study infectious diseases, including pathogens like HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and more recently, COVID-19, etc. the immune response and disease progression and primates offer insights that help in developing vaccines and treatments. They also study neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and other neurodegenerative diseases. Now, the facilities primate models aid in understanding the neurological and cognitive processes affected by these diseases. Now, as we were talking about earlier as well, there is another facility, just five miles north of Alpha Genesis, which is located in Yemise, and five miles north.
Starting point is 00:16:28 north, you have another facility, and then we've talked about Morgan Island. So what is Morgan Island also known as a monkey island here in the state of South Carolina? Well, it is an island where they take the monkeys from the island, take them then to Alpha Genesis or the other facility, and get them ready for the biopharmaceutical companies to figure out what they're probably going to inject them with next. Now, the reason why I said that we are doing this episode, which we're going to get to in a minute, is just how dangerous and deadly, potentially, some of these viruses that they are actually testing on these monkeys are.
Starting point is 00:17:02 And we're talking about things that we had talked about in the past. And this was after COVID-19 happened, we started researching, like, what else were they testing in Wuhan Institute of Virology? One of those being the NEPA virus. NEPA virus is extremely deadly. It would be far, far worse than COVID-19 ever thought about being. And we started hearing about this NEPA virus deal, because as we were, we were, we were were starting to realize that NIH and Anthony Falsci and all these other organizations that were using
Starting point is 00:17:31 our taxpayer money to send money to these facilities, we started realizing they were testing a lot more deadly viruses than just COVID-19. And then as we started research in this monkey incident here in South Carolina, it kind of opened our eyes and blew us away for the fact that we are still doing a lot of the same shit that got us in the COVID-19 situation to begin with. But before we get into that, I want to get into the Morgan Island, what Morgan Island is. There's a great video on YouTube, which we're going to get into in just a second. And it's from Mason Obscura. And he talks about Monkey Island.
Starting point is 00:18:07 He gives a great outline and detail of what it is, how many monkeys are there, what are they doing, kind of a firsthand account of this island. And so let's go ahead and get into Mason Obscura's video to check it out. Listen. There's an island full of monkeys in South Carolina. Seriously, I've seen it. Took a boat there. Saw the monkeys. They're there.
Starting point is 00:18:31 There's about 3,000 of them. And they live about seven miles off the coast of Beaufort, South Carolina, which is about an hour south of Charleston. Now, this is the part where you go, Hey, Mace, why is there an island full of monkeys in South Carolina? And that's a great question. This is Morgan Island, also known to many as Monkey Island. and it was one of the largest colonies of free-roaming rhesus monkeys in the world.
Starting point is 00:19:00 During 1979 and 1980, over 1,400 monkeys were shipped from La Paguerra facility of the Caribbean Primate Research Center in Puerto Rico to Morgan Island. Loaded onto an aging DC3 cargo plane, they were flown from Puerto Rico to Miami before their final leg brought them directly to Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort, where they were unloaded to the amusement of. of the Marines before being trucked over to a small dock and boated seven miles to their new home on Morgan Island. The majority of the island is salt marsh, but just under 400 acres of highland provide a habitat for the animals. Since then, the colony has grown and now numbers over 3,000, with a strong female bias making up about 75% of the total population. The translocation process was not without its risks. Mortality rate during shipping was
Starting point is 00:19:53 was estimated at 0.65%. Despite this setback, however, Morgan Island Monkeys managed to reestablish their social groups shortly after they were released. Originally relocated to the United States in order to be used for research into polio vaccines in Bethesda, Maryland. The colony provided a large population of animals that could be used for various scientific research. The Morgan Island monkey colony is an important resource for research in primate behavior and ecology due to its large size and high degree of genetic variability compared with other colonies around the world. As such, it provides a unique opportunity for researchers to gain insight into various aspects of primate biology that would otherwise be difficult or impossible to study in any other location or group
Starting point is 00:20:45 upsetting. The monkeys are owned by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, but the animals themselves are managed by a company known as the Charles River Labor Laboratories, a pharmaceutical company that has also been breeding and collecting research animals since 1947. Everything from rats to monkeys and even horseshoe crabs, whose blue blood is used in pharmaceutical and medical applications. Charles River Labs leases the island directly from the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources. Of course, an island full of research monkeys overseen by a pharmaceutical company that gives millions of dollars to a government agency comes with absolutely no objection. Everyone is totally cool with this. Yeah, no, that isn't true.
Starting point is 00:21:32 For one thing, the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources takes in around $1.5 million a year from just leasing the land to the Charles River Laboratories. Money that covers the salaries of over 30 employees at the Department of Natural Resources. This money is necessary for an agency that operates on a slashed budget. On top of this, Charles River Labs has offered additional money to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars and no strings attached, which one may find odd from a multi-billion-dollar for-profit company, though who knows, maybe their heart is just in the right place. Either way, it raises concerns about a conflict of
Starting point is 00:22:14 interest between these two particular groups, and is an easy point to pick at, especially for animal rights groups and environmental activists. Without the lease income from the lab, the Department of Natural Resources here faces an uphill financial battle. The last few decades of Morgan Island history since the inception of the monkey colony has been an interesting one. The ownership of the island was private until being purchased by the Department of Natural Resources, and at times faced attempts by developers to build dozens of homes and create whole neighborhoods nearby the monkey community. This raised obvious questions such as, what about the monkeys?
Starting point is 00:22:53 You know, the 3,000 monkeys that live here. They are, for all intents and purposes, wild animals, some of which can carry different forms of herpes, spreadable to humans, though not often fatal. What would happen if the monkeys escaped, became invasive or destructive, or swam across the river, which Reesus monkeys are literally known to do. These pros and cons were weighed based off the added benefits of expanding the community and increasing tax inflow, with the ability to lease the land to the previous tenant responsible for the monkeys.
Starting point is 00:23:26 Eventually, the purchase by the Department of Natural Resources would seal the fate of the island and its inhabitants. The island is in many ways tied to the community, whether people know it or not. The original manager of the colony of monkeys, David Taub, would go on to become Beaufort's mayor from 1990 to 1999, and the county's magistrate judge from 2010 to 2015. Additionally, the occasional monkey escape can lead to interaction between the animals and the local populace, though so far no escapee has gone unfound. Despite the fact that one managed to get over to Ladies Island, one of the larger inhabited islands, six miles away, before being caught and brought back. to Morgan Island. What's amazing is that these aren't the only monkeys roaming free in America, either. Outside Ocala, Florida, a defunct river tour led to the introduction of a large group of
Starting point is 00:24:18 monkeys that now call an area along the Silver River home. The man who ran the tour wanted to jungle up the experience, and in doing so, released the rapidly multiplying primate to central Florida. There are estimates that the troop is in the hundreds, if not thousands. And because of its location, the possibility of interaction with humans and the local populace is considerably higher than here at Morgan Island, which is about seven miles off the coast. Thanks for watching. So that is the DL on Morgan Island. Now, I wanted to play that entire clip because I want you to fully understand Morgan Island and the fact that there's even an island off the coast of South Carolina with all of these monkeys that are eventually probably going to be put into programs
Starting point is 00:25:05 where they are tested and tortured and you name it. And we'll get into that in just a second. But talking about being tested and tortured, some of these monkeys were tested with herpes complex B. And what they did is they injected these female monkeys with the herpes virus and they let them bleed to death without relief. This is what they're doing to these monkeys. And you ask yourself, how are all these monkeys in, you know, outside population, especially in Florida, how do they have herpes in the first place? It's because they're being tested on. And I read a report that over one-fourth of the monkeys in Florida have this herpes virus.
Starting point is 00:25:44 Yeah, and there's no telling what other viruses they have. I mean, you've got to think if these are monkeys that have been tested on, obviously that is, should be at the very least a danger to people and to the public. Now, there is an amazing organization called White Coat Waste Project. and they have been heavily investigating Falschi and Falschie's Monkey Island. And that is what the headline says. WCW investigation, Falshies Monkey Island. And it talks about off the southeast coast of South Carolina lies Morgan Island.
Starting point is 00:26:14 This small desolate marshland is uninhabited by humans, but home to a vibrant community of thousands of monkeys, earning the nickname, obviously, Monkey Island from Atlas Obscura and others. Now, don't start making any travel plans, though. unauthorized visitors are strictly prohibited from setting foot on the island's swampy shores because Morgan Island is home to one of the government's darkest, most horrifying secrets. The island is not a sanctuary. It is not a wildlife refuge. It is a flesh factory where monkeys are born to suffer and bred to die.
Starting point is 00:26:45 Every year, around 500 monkeys are taken from their home on Morgan Island and shipped to U.S. labs where they are subjected to batteries of extraordinary and painful experiments and infected with the most dangerous and deadly diseases known to man. Now, you guys can check this out as well for yourselves if you go to blog. That whitecoatwaste.org, but, you know, just showing you, it shows you a picture of this monkey, and it's just pretty bad. It's a bad picture. It kind of just shows how much this monkey has been tortured because of whatever experiment
Starting point is 00:27:17 it was a part of. And this monkey was apparently infected with a deadly disease in a faulty run lab and then photographed by the government. white coats, and the actual photo was obtained by WCW investigators. Now, no monkeys ever returned to Morgan Island because if disease doesn't kill them, Dr. Falsh's white coats and NIAID will. You see, the monkeys in Morgan Island are owned by the NIH, which is the National Institute of Health.
Starting point is 00:27:44 And to be precise, their property of Dr. Fulchie's agency, the National Institute of Allerie, or sorry, allergy and infectious disease. Now, their investigators discovered that Falki is wasting a lot of taxpayer dollars on this government monkey business, 13.5 million since March of 2018, with 8.9 million coming directly from NIAID. So since January 2020, and this is a actual letter from Dr. Fauci to Congress, he says a total of 388 non-human primates were shipped from Morgan Island to NIAID,
Starting point is 00:28:19 intramural or partner facilities for use in NIAID-funded research. Some non-human primates have been delivered to research facilities but have not yet entered experimental protocols. It says a total of 152 non-human primates from Oregon Island were transferred to federal research partners. And this is a Dr. Anthony Falsy letter to Congress. Now, obviously, Representative Nancy Mason, South Carolina, she has talked about and been very vocal on her efforts to spotlight the federal government's experiments on dogs and monkeys. And this is what she had to say on Fox. I just want you to hear this brief clip from Nancy Mace. That can bring animals and animal experiments.
Starting point is 00:29:00 They're not right or left. This is an issue that can bring both sides of the aisle together. Morgan Island, also known locally as Monkey Island. Growing up in South Carolina's low country, we always thought this was a retirement home or sanctuary for primates or monkeys that have been used in experiments. We'll come to find out after white coat waste did a FOIA request and gather documentation.
Starting point is 00:29:22 they are taking approximately 600 primates and monkeys and using them on scientific, gruesome and barbaric experiments, much like the puppies that, by the way, Dr. Fauci never responded to our letter about the beagle puppies. So I might have to rename this island from Monkey Island to Fauci Island just to get a response on these things. It's crazy. It's barbaric. It's gruesome and it's got to end.
Starting point is 00:29:46 So that was Nancy Mace on Fox News where she was talking about Monkey Island, but also she was talking about the beagles that Fauci has been in charge of as well. Going back to White Coat Waste and their investigation here, update as of 2021, the NIAID confirmed that they owned the monkeys of Morgan Island. And in a statement provided to Timcast, a NIAID representative wrote, the island is currently owned by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources and leased by Charles River Laboratories incorporated as part of a contract with the NIAID. Now, the non-human primates raised on Morgan Island are owned by the NIAID.
Starting point is 00:30:25 And this is an actual letter that was obtained. It says they must produce a minimum of 500 animals per year for the government's use. That is part of the contract. Now, after being taken from their home on Morgan Island, the monkeys arrive at various laboratories, and that's where the torture begins. So the NIAID is committed to funding innovative basic research. This is a letter from Falski to Congress in the development of vaccines, diagnostic therapeutics, and other interventions for a wide variety of infections and immune-mediated diseases.
Starting point is 00:30:57 It even says later in the letter, research requires the use of animal models. It also says that approximately $658 million of NIAID funds in 20 and 2021 combined went to support intramural and extramural research projects that included an element utilizing non-human primates. So we're probably seeing those monkeys that were coming from Morgan Island. That was part of that. Now, in one experiment, which authors acknowledged was funded by Intermural Research Program and NIAID, 12 monkeys were injected with deadly Crimean Congo hemorrhagetic fever, also known as the CCHFV. They developed fever, lethargy, and hemorrhages before they were killed. Even the monkeys who survived the initial infection were still killed.
Starting point is 00:31:43 Other experiments that WCW on Earth are even worse. The NIAID has funded extensive numbers of maximum pain experiments on primates where pain relief is completely withheld, including infecting monkeys with Ebola and other hemorrhjatic viruses, including Lassa virus and the NEPA virus, infecting monkeys with tuberculosis, inducing sepsis blood infections in primates, and modeling SARS-CoV-2 on various primates. And right here, part of the letters that were obtained, Ebola virus infection may result in uniform lethality. The filial viruses cause a viral hemorrhagatic disease, which rapidly progresses from onset,
Starting point is 00:32:24 and includes high fever, anorexia, and recumbricacy, development of petrileical and macular rash, and a multi-organ failure. It also talks about they explain that producing pain and or distress, including reasons for specifics, animals infected with the Ebola virus will experience pain and distress, and the infection. and the infection is expected to be lethal. It goes into saying that infection with the Lassa virus, or also known as Josiah, is 100% lethal in Racy's monkeys within approximately 14 days post-challenge. Signs of illness can include fever, rash, diarrhea, bleeding, and malice prior to internal hemorrhgin
Starting point is 00:33:05 and multi-organ failure leading to the ultimate death. It also talks about the signs may include weight loss, restatory, and neurological disease. Lasovirus will cause. cause clinical disease and non-protected animals will ultimately succumb around 8 to 17 days. So obviously, when we talk back about Ebola, that's very deadly. We've heard about Ebola. One of the reasons, and there's been a lot of people, it's like, well, if they wanted a pandemic that was going to kill people all around the world, why would they not just use Ebola?
Starting point is 00:33:31 Part of that is because for a virus that is going to be a pandemic-style virus, a worldwide virus that kills many people around the world, you can't have it kill the host too soon. That was one of the biggest things. Ebola, that's why it is not a worldwide breakout of a virus. It kills the host typically too soon, so it doesn't spread very well. Now, when we had Cherry did the podcast on the NEPA virus back in the day, one of the things we learned about the NEPA virus and the fact that they were doing gain of function research on this NEPA virus, it showed that more than likely,
Starting point is 00:34:03 I'm assuming this was after gain of function research, but it took about 30 days for this virus to infect anyone. So if you got this virus and this is 100% potential, I think they're saying in the lab lab scenario, it was like an 80% lethality. So, you know, 80% of the people will die. But if you had it and I had it and someone else had it, it would take 30 days for us to even see any symptoms. And then within a few days, we'd be dead after that. But the problem with that is that you have then infected everyone you've come in contact with for an entire month.
Starting point is 00:34:36 And it's one of the things we were saying last night on our X space is that so many people, especially during COVID and during that time said that all this asymptomatic talk about people were infected with COVID but didn't show any signs or symptoms. A lot of people just thought that was the government's way of making everyone feel like that they had to stay home, even if they didn't feel sick to lock them down, to control them further. But it seems actually like to me, the more you start looking at NEPA virus, I think that part of COVID-19 gain of function was figuring out how to make the virus asymptomatic,
Starting point is 00:35:11 but also still be able to spread the virus. And then they were going to utilize what they found in that with deadlier viruses like NEPA virus, like the LASA virus, even Ebola potentially. And so I don't think it was a big necessarily conspiracy that people had asymptomatic COVID. I think that was a large part of what they were trying to accomplish in their gain of function research, not only making it more deadly for humans, more infectious to humans, but also just the fact of how can we make this infect more and more people by making it. people asymptomatic for an extended period of time and then, you know, eventually succumbing
Starting point is 00:35:45 or dying. So that's what the scary part of that whole deal is. As it talks about here, animals infected with the Ebola virus will experience pain and distress, and the infection is expected to be lethal. So two is Lhasa, and the infection with the Lassa virus is 100% lethal. I mean, that's nuts. So Tim Poulwood talked about this quite a while ago. Falki's NIAID funding Island Island Island in South Carolina used a horrific maximum.
Starting point is 00:36:11 pain experiments. And this is maximum pain experiments to where they wanted to see how painful that some of the diseases could be. And they did not offer these monkeys any type of pain relief or anything. They wanted them to suffer to the maximum degree of suffering. And this is what our NIH, our NIAID. This is what FALC and all of them have done to not just monkeys, but also beagles. And apparently other animals across the world as well.
Starting point is 00:36:39 So obviously primate testing is cruel and wasteful, which is what White Coast Project says here. And why it's being phased out from many government departments and agencies, including the Department of Veterans Affairs, which has committed to phasing out primate testing by 2025, thanks to the WCW's hardfall advocacy programs. The VA even ended some of its most wasteful experiments, including an infamous angel dust and brain damage experiments in Minnesota and spine severing dexterity experiments in Connecticut.
Starting point is 00:37:09 We've actually, I've seen some of the photos of that. You don't want to see them. They're nuts. What they do is some of these monkeys for those. But while the VA and others are phasing that out, the NIH and NIAID, which is Falki's group. I mean, that's Falki's organizations, agencies, I guess you should say, they're doubling down on their horrific experiments. And this shouldn't surprise you because they also want to experiment on people. And that's what I think COVID-19 was.
Starting point is 00:37:33 And so this is how your taxpayer money is being spent. And in February 2022, a letter to Congress describing how Monkey Island primates are used in painful NIAID experiments was signed by Dr. Fulci himself. And it was pretty horrific. And it talks very deeply about what they do to these monkeys. And so Congress knew this. And that's why people like Nancy May started to come out and saying, look, we got to do something about this because this is absolutely bat shit crazy. I say bat shit because it ain't COVID. But it is crazy.
Starting point is 00:38:04 But she even got to tour this facility and see what was really going on. But could you imagine touring a facility that has 4,000 monkeys? And they're just sit in pins. They're like in little family groupings of 50 monkeys in each little cage. They say they get to go outside. But looking at the facility, I don't see where they get to go outside. There's no trees around there. There's no grass.
Starting point is 00:38:27 There's nowhere for these monkeys. They are stuck in a cage 24-7. I mean, that's worse than being in prison. Well, yeah. And especially considering you're going to some lab, if not that one, to be tortured. Yeah. I mean, that's where these monkeys are going to end up. And for the monkeys that just, they just finally caught, oh, thank God they caught the monkeys.
Starting point is 00:38:46 No, and thank God they shouldn't have caught the monkeys. I know. That's what the crazy thing is, is that, you know, they were cooing with the monkeys inside the Alpha Genesis facility. Like saying, come on, get out. Listen, I went to their Facebook account and I was just looking through their Facebook, and there were so many people commentating on their Facebook that were mad about it. And they're like, let the monkeys go.
Starting point is 00:39:06 This is disgusting what you're doing. And you should never have done this in the first place. And you need to take them to a sanctuary. And I totally agree. I just think when you're testing on animals like that and causing pain with no relief, there's some other way you can do testing in, you know, 2024. Well, they don't care, though. I mean, look at what just happened to the entire world with COVID-19.
Starting point is 00:39:29 Look at these same agencies that continually lied to the American people and to our guns. government tried to say they weren't doing gain of function, but they were. I mean, these are the same agencies. They are like the evil scientists that are in a laboratory trying to figure out how to kill and completely control the population in the world. That's what I truly think. And then you even got other people like Bill Gates that is for some reason so heavily involved in vaccine development.
Starting point is 00:39:52 I don't think it's for saving people. No, it's depopulation. And my opinion is absolutely depopulation. But Rand Paul is here in this interview with Stosser, and it's a short clip, John Stossel, but talking about gain of fun. function and how deadly it actually is and can be for us. Listen. So evil Chinese scientists in a lab funded by America? America funded it. And I think it was maybe not done it with evil intentions. It was done
Starting point is 00:40:18 with misguided notion that gain of function research was safe. And so many people... And explain gain of function research. Gain of function is when you take a virus that exists in nature and another virus in nature and you take part of one virus and stick it on to the other. So one of the things that they can do with coronavirus, they take an S protein, they stick it on another virus. But then they say, well, then let's see what it does to humans. Well, the thing is, is they sometimes create viruses that don't exist in nature that are now more infectious. They've gained the function of lethality or infectiousness by being combined in a lab. We know they were doing this. And this is one of the
Starting point is 00:40:54 things that we discover in the book. And one of the things that we put out there, Fauci admits, on February 1st of 2020 at the very beginning that they're doing gain of function research in the Wuhan labs and that we funded it. And the purpose of it is to let the virus thrive and then develop a vaccine, find a way to kill it. Probably. Just probably. Take this unknown virus. They bring it back to Wuhan, 15 million people. Then they say, yeah, this is a new virus, a new coronavirus. What would happen if we mixed it with this other coronavirus? So the whole virus identification project, which has been going on for about 10 years or hundreds of millions of dollars have gone into this U.S. dollars has been not just to identify
Starting point is 00:41:33 every virus on the planet, but to identify it and then do gain and function research to manipulate it to see what happens. And they're legitimate scientists. There's Kevin S. Velt, who we quote in the book from MIT, who says that basically this is a risk to civilization, because we could wind up with a virus that's 50% lethal that leaks out of a lab and kills half of the planet. That literally is a possibility. But they're not just, playing around. They're trying to find ways to stop diseases. But many scientists have now looked at this and said that we haven't found it. We've been doing this gain to function research for quite a while, and nobody can really point towards an exact benefit from this. The other argument against this
Starting point is 00:42:14 is that when you create viruses in the lab, evolution is random. And so when a virus or a dangerous virus evolves, it does it through random mutation and then something we get an unlucky one and it takes off. If you create it a virus in the lab, it's not random, it's manmade. And you say, I'm doing this so I can discover what's going to come from nature. Well, because it's random and there are millions of different combinations that could happen, the likelihood that you create something that creates a vaccine that's going to help anybody is pretty slim to none. This controversy has been going on since before COVID.
Starting point is 00:42:46 It really started in 2010 with the avian flu. The avian flu is from chickens and birds, and it's very deadly when it gets into humans. It's 50% mortality. but it's not very contagious. So a guy in the Netherlands said, why don't we see if we can aerosolize it, make it transmitted by air, even though it's not normally transmitted that way?
Starting point is 00:43:05 And people said, that's crazy. And he did it. And then there was a discussion over whether the knowledge should be published because it might become a roadmap for terrorists to create this kind of virus. And so Anthony Fauci was on one side, and Richard E. Bright and the other scientists were on the other side, and they had a big war.
Starting point is 00:43:21 And Anthony Fauci won, like he's won so many times. And he said 2012, even if a pandemic occurs, if a scientist becomes infected and the community becomes infected, the knowledge is worth it. Well, that's a judgment call. And I would say there's probably 16 million families around the world who might disagree with that now. But this is a real debate that has to be had. It's all funded by government, whether or not government should have some regulations on what they fund. I think without question, we should regulate government more to have more scrutiny over this. They are still funding, gain and function research. Yeah, absolutely. There's 12 different places in the United States that we do this. There are some labs that we're not
Starting point is 00:43:56 even allowed to go into that we're petitioning to try to find out about this. But there's one other important thing that happened in this, and it adds to the culpability. It wasn't just a bad decision of Anthony Fauci. There was a pause. Between 2014 and 16, this was so dangerous, they said no more gain and function research. And yet it kept happening. How did they get these exempted? Our government, our government stopped the funding of gain and function research from 2014 to 16. And yet many of these things in Wuhan were still going on through this. Who approved them? But they also set up a committee. In 2017, they turned the spigot back on. It's in January of 2017. Gain of function is now going to be funded once again. But as they turn it on, it's like they set up a committee.
Starting point is 00:44:37 And this committee is supposed to see all dangerous research and say, is it dangerous? Should we let it happen? None of the Wuhan research went before there. So when I questioned Fauci and committee, he says, all my people, up and down, all 12, dozens of experts tell me it's not gain and function. It's like, where's the discussion? Have you ever heard of a government discussion where there's no paperwork? And why didn't it go before the committee? And then I met the person who's in charge of the safety committee. He said he only looked at three studies over like a four-year period. And I'd say, why? He says, I didn't have the ability to go out and look at studies. It had to be self-referred. People had to volunteer. I think I'm doing gain and function research. Would you look at it? And he looked at three and I think
Starting point is 00:45:14 they turned down one or two out of three. But this was exempted from the safety committee. It could have only been done with Anthony Fauci's permission. I think we are eventually going to find paperwork. We haven't got it yet. We're going to find paperwork that shows Anthony Fauci gave permission for the research to happen in Wuhan without scrutiny by the safety committee. So that was Rand Paul. And a lot of what he said should not surprise you. I mean, this is our government. This is what we have went through since COVID-19. And that's why so many people say lock Falci up. You know, he should be in prison in any other sane world that Dr. Falci would be in. prison. He continually went behind Congress, went behind the actual mandates that were put in place to
Starting point is 00:45:54 stop gain and function research and intentionally did it instead and use an American taxpayer dollars. And even Rand Paul says there are some labs that we can't even go into. Why would they not be able to go into labs? And these are the people that are supposed to hold these agencies accountable. But that's exactly what the deep state and the globalists and the bureaucrats do not want is any accountability. That's why they hated the fact that Trump just won. And And that's why I'm still worried. We got 70 days until Trump gets in. What will the deep state?
Starting point is 00:46:24 And a lot of these people, they're in control of a lot of these agencies. You know, how desperate are they going to be? And talking about the government regulations, they're pretty much shit here. And if they're shit here, you could imagine what they are in China. But I just want to talk about for just a minute, AWA, which is Animal Welfare Act. And what this does is it protects animals like primates, dogs, cats, guinea pigs, things like that. but it does not protect rats, mice, birds, things like that. And you think about what they're testing these things on, like bats, for example, birds.
Starting point is 00:46:55 They don't even have to regulate those kind of animals. They don't even have to report those animals. The only animals that have to be reported or the ones that are protected under AWA. And if they're not federally registered, they don't have to report anything and they fly under the radar. So the numbers that we have are way lower than what they actually are as far as test. on animals go. So you're talking about the numbers that we're seeing as far as how many animals are tested on, probably the deaths of animals, even the humane treatment of animals.
Starting point is 00:47:27 There's so much of this. Obviously, if they're not even reporting a large amount potentially of the animals they're testing, then you're not going to know about how deadly or torturistic or whatever the case may be for some of these animals are. And I think the reason that we wanted to talk about this, although yes, there are 25 monkeys that have been captured now. we want you guys to understand what is still going on inside of this country as we speak. I mean, we still have gain of function more than likely that is happening right here in the United
Starting point is 00:47:55 States of America. We have, if we have labs that congressmen and senators are not even allowed to go into, obviously there's a reason for that. Or it's just maybe we got some of the deadliest viruses on the entire planet in these labs. And it even goes back to us like, oh, we just, we need to do this to work on vaccines. And as you just heard Rand Paul just say, something evolves from nature. It is going to go in some type of random sequets. So then whatever vaccine you supposedly have that you think's going to work is not going to
Starting point is 00:48:25 work anyway because you don't even know what the variant will be that comes out of that. I think most of this research, especially the gain of function and stuff, I think it's being done for bio-warfare. Yes, I do too. And it's not just bio-warfare against, say, China or Russia. I think a lot of that could potentially be on their own people. And if you guys are just even wondering how many facilities are actually in the United States of America, I kind of researched a lot of this stuff. There's over 100,000 facilities just in the United States of America.
Starting point is 00:48:54 And in these facilities, are you sure it's 100,000? Yes. And in these facilities, listen to this. It exceeds 14 million animals per year that they're testing on. 14 million exceeds that. And this is not even the animals that are protected under AWA, meaning this is not included. including the mice and the rats and the birds. So out of all these animals, 70,000 primates are tested with the Category E, which means pain with no relief each year.
Starting point is 00:49:25 70,000. Guess how many beagles in America are tested each year? 60,000 category E, pain, no relief. And when they get done testing them, if they don't die during the experiments, they put them to death. Now, there are advocates that are trying to get Beagles. homed and I've, you know, I'm in several beagle communities because we have a beagle and I love him probably more than my child. Well, I do love my child, but he's like my child. He was actually sitting on my lap as I'm researching about these poor beagles and seeing, you know, what awful
Starting point is 00:49:58 things they do to them. I was seeing pictures of beagles with these black masks on them and they're just trying to get them off. They're in little cubicles. They have no life. They have no cuddly bed. They have nothing. Just suffering. I just, I hate this. Yeah, a lot of times they'll actually just trap the dog's heads in like a separate compartment to where they cannot get to any other part of their body. And then they just basically torture them with whatever their experiment on them with. And you know, I did see, I didn't know actually how many beagles were in the United States, but I did see that there were a lot of beagles that even the NIH and them fund in China.
Starting point is 00:50:34 Yes. And China's experiments I've heard is also pretty brutal and actually a lot worse than a lot of places in the United States, at least that's what they say. Now, in the beagles, I think they test on them most because they're most dysol and, you know, they're easy to get along with and they're easy to handle. But out of the 60,000 beagles, you think about dogs in general. They test tens of thousands of dogs each year in the United States of America. So that's not just beagles. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:01 That's other animals as well. But also the reason why I had saw they test the beagles is because they have a closer gene pool to human beings, which is very interesting. You never knew that. And then obviously the Reese's month. The reason they use those is because it has a 94% gene similarity with human beings. So if you want to look in a monkey that is the closest or one of the closest primates to us, that is the type of monkey that is, even though they're small. They're not very big monkeys. They are small monkeys, but apparently extremely smart.
Starting point is 00:51:32 They have many similar cognitive, I guess, signs and signals that they use for experimentation, even verbalization, pain, remorse, sadness, depression. all these things. And some of this is what they test at the Alpha Genesis facility. According to AI, anyway, they tested on some of these monkeys. They tested depression, anxiety, but also obviously all the other stuff, HIV, AIDS, COVID, you name it. And I was just thinking to myself, I was like, I would love to know how they test anxiety and depression on these monkeys. Like, can you imagine? Yeah. Well, I know in Puerto Rico, too, they have an island. It's called Monkey Island. And it's right off the coast of Puerto Rico somewhere. And they leave these monkeys on the island to go through hurricanes, you know, so they hope the hurricanes are going to hit these damn islands
Starting point is 00:52:16 so they can see how these monkeys react and do whatever with hurricanes, which is pretty bad in itself, but, you know, it's definitely not as bad as infecting these monkeys with hemorrhatic diseases and then them dying a horrifically painful death. Yeah. You know, if you think about, if you just think about in general, how the NIH and NIAID seems like they just do not give a damn about animal rights or welfare or anything like that. And a lot of these monkeys are 94% gene pool related to humans or at least closeness to humans. And then you also think about how much faulty, which has been over these organizations,
Starting point is 00:52:52 has lied in front of Congress and in front of Senate and everywhere else he's been. I just think that they were also experimenting on the population of the world with COVID-19. And I think that I almost think that COVID-19 was not as deadly as, you know, many were scared that it was going to be on purpose. I think they released it to be just about that deadly to really kill millions of people probably, but still not half the population. And then they could test. And I think they were probably testing for this asymptomaticness of, hey, how can we get something that is asymptomatic but also deadly? Because especially if you look at what's on the heels of COVID-19, you got the NEPA virus in the labs, which is potentially 80% mortality rate in animals in these monkeys.
Starting point is 00:53:37 It's 100% mortality rate. So, you know, could that also be as deadly for humans? Absolutely. But it's a very scary world we live in. And hopefully to God, you know, now that this administration in the United States is coming through with RFK, with the vaccine research stuff, maybe we can put a stop to a lot of this. Because if you think about before COVID came out and it got released in the Wuhan lab, the bat virus, you got to think about event 201 that was played out just months before COVID was released. And this was a playout basically saying, what would? happen if a virus like that would come out. The only thing they did different in this event 201 is they
Starting point is 00:54:16 said it came from a pig and it came from South America instead of China. And they played out everything that would happen. They had very important people from all over the world, go through this experiment. They even talked about what would they do with people that would refuse to take vaccinations. Which I, by the way, I believe, you know, if you go back and look at the event two in one scenario, watch the video, kind of go through, because it's on there. I mean, it's out there on the internet. They say exactly what they did and how they were doing it. It was funded and sponsored by Bill Melinda Gates Foundation alongside John Hopkins
Starting point is 00:54:49 University, which also was very closely related to this when COVID-19 happened. And event 201 was only a few months before COVID-19 actually rolled out. And it seemed like if you just go and watch the videos, we even have an event to a one video on our Facebook. I'll try to find it and post it on our X account so you guys can go and check it over on our X. I think the biggest simulation that they were trying to accomplish in Event 201 was making sure that people were not going to dissent to their vaccines. That's honestly what I think. They weren't trying to necessarily figure out how are we going to stop the millions of dead. You know, they didn't really focus a ton on that. Oh, no, but they also experimented with that
Starting point is 00:55:28 in New York when they put people with COVID into nursing homes. Yeah, exactly. I mean, to me, that was a total human experiment. Yeah, and drove the numbers up. Although they did have, you know, these massive Navy hospital ships right off the coast that Trump sent up there that they refused to use and instead just sent the COVID patients back into nursing homes. But anyways, what I was saying about Event 201 as well is it just seemed like they wanted to make sure how they were going, that all social media was going to be in compliance with whatever they were going to do. They were going to censor and delete any misinformation and disinformation. And to be honest, this is really when we start. seeing the word miss and disinformation start coming to life was during the event 201.
Starting point is 00:56:09 They specifically talked about how are we going to stop people from saying stuff to other people that might get them not to take the vaccine. And so then the social media companies are like, well, we're going to censor this and we're going to make sure we do this and we're going to work closely with this. It was all a freaking experiment. I mean, that's what it seems like. So if you look at the overarching thing, yes, right now we are complaining and raising awareness and doing whatever we can about the monkeys and all the other animals that are being tested on.
Starting point is 00:56:37 But understand that likely that's what happened during 2020 and COVID-19 was we were the testes. Yes. We were the people that were experimented on. And what will be next? What will they experiment on next? Do you think that they actually give a shit if they release a virus that comes out and kills the shit out of people? And it's like I said on our ex-space last night, imagine if the NEPA virus was released, right? And so say it had an 80% mortality.
Starting point is 00:57:04 That means 80% of the population of the world's dead unless you have a vaccine. And then so imagine them coming out and saying, all right, guys, we got a vaccine for this. Number one, the pharmaceutical companies are going to make billions anyway because they already got the money. So they don't give it down. Yeah, they've already had the transfer of wealth. And they know that no one is, I mean, there's going to be people definitely taking the vaccine. And maybe those people actually will live this time. Can you imagine how many people would not take a vaccine at this point?
Starting point is 00:57:29 That is the dangerous part. how much the media has lied to us, how much the NIH has lied to us, and Anthony Palti, and just everyone, the health care system, how much they lied to everybody during that entire pandemic is probably part of the most dangerous thing they ever did for humanity is because now nobody trusts the medical system. Nobody trust or will heed warning if something like the NEPA virus comes out and they say, hey, we got a vaccine for this. It will save your life, but you have to take it.
Starting point is 00:57:57 Most people are going to be like, no, sorry, I'd rather just die. And during these Congress meetings with Anthony Fauci, they were talking about gang and function. And when they finally targeted him and said, what exactly is it? That's when he went to the NIH website and changed the definition of gang and function so he wouldn't get caught. I mean, this is how bad they were lying to us. And we think about they first said, oh, yeah, this came from a bat in a animal market where you buy animals. And then like, oh, nope, it did actually. I'm from the Wuhan lab, but it was accident.
Starting point is 00:58:33 I don't even think it was an accident. I think it was put out on purpose. Yeah. And speaking of that, we actually had Ron Johnson where he was asking about gain of function in this hearing. And what is the point of gain of function research, he said. And this is what this short conversation, but I do want to play this to you guys before we get off.
Starting point is 00:58:51 This is kind of some of what he found out in this just a couple of minute long clip. Research ecosystem. I mean, if that's, if that is what is. driving research and very dangerous research is so that you can get a funding grant just to do something, I guess, for grins, and then he can publish it and get the academic kudos for it. Matt, I'm sorry, I just find that sick. I would not use the term corrupt. I would not see any real difference between this than the activity of a hedge fund or the activity
Starting point is 00:59:26 of a bank or a broker. The key point is that because of these incentives, self-regulation from within the community is insufficient. The scientific research community will follow the incentives. It will never effectively self-regulate on these issues. For this reason, we have regulations with force of law for vertebrate animals research, and for human subjects' research. We need regulations with force of law for gay and not. function research of concern.
Starting point is 00:59:58 I think the difference if it's a banker hedge fund, I mean, they're doing things for an economic incentive to do something, you know, to fund a manufacturing site, to fund some kind of business. Again, this is research that has, again, I'm not hearing the benefit of this research. I'm just not seeing the risk, I'm seeing the danger. I'm not seeing the benefit other than what you're saying for the researcher itself to just get money to do something that's dangerous and have the, again, the academic kudos for being published. I don't know. Maybe you don't like the word corrupt.
Starting point is 01:00:38 It's completely useless. It has no benefit to society. It just has risk, just has danger. And there you go. And that's what he's saying. Most people that look at gain and function research does not have an actual benefit to society. They're lying to the people. They're lying to Congress.
Starting point is 01:00:55 They're lying to the government. say that, hey, with gain of function, we can create vaccines. And that's just a lie because they can't technically create vaccines based on gain of function research. They can't do it. So therefore, it's only dangerous. And so why are they doing it? Well, you can say it's for making this money.
Starting point is 01:01:14 And, you know, as Ron Johnson, a couple of people here in this committee say is because they want to put this on their resume that they, you know, participated in this type of research. I don't believe that shit. I think it is a coordinated effort for bioweapons on whether it is against another country or against their own people. And even going back to the Russia-Ukraine situation, when Russia finally invaded, and there was 13 bio-labs in Ukraine that was United States-owned. And then also keeping in mind, that's what Putin himself came out and originally said. And then the left and everybody went crazy and said, oh, that's just, that's a lie. That's obviously propaganda.
Starting point is 01:01:54 And anybody that believes what Putin's saying here is a propagandist until our own undersecretary in our government came out in a hearing and committee and say, yeah, we do, we do have 13 labs there. And they are research facilities. And, you know, it's all a bunch of bullshit. Obviously, they were all on the border of Russia. They had these bio-weapons labs on the border. And more than likely also probably had weapons in Ukraine, even though Ukraine was not part of NATO. but they were basically using Ukraine like it was part of NATO. That's why they had a pro-Western president in power.
Starting point is 01:02:28 You know, they made sure to install that person. So they didn't really need NATO for Ukraine. But this whole thing is like, even just the connections with the Bidens and, you know, Burisma and all of the money laundering that's been back and forth. And who knows what other politicians potentially was laundering or doing whatever during and because of Ukraine. And we're continually just sending them billions and billions and billions. and billions and billions of dollars.
Starting point is 01:02:53 Of our taxpayer dollars. What we're making is going to them. Yeah. And what we're making is also going to fund all of these research facilities where they are torture and animals, where they are creating more deadly viruses that could wipe out our entire population. We've got to get to the bottom of this. We got to figure out a way to be able to really pressure, especially this incoming administration,
Starting point is 01:03:16 especially RFK if he joins and has a large part of the vaccine, whether it be research or just whatever. We have to figure out a way to pressure this administration to make sure that a lot of this shit stops and maybe we reach out to someone or an organization like White Coat Waste. I think they're doing a great job exposing this. So if anybody out there knows or knows a lot more about this topic or is passionate about it, reach out to us, investigate Earth podcast at ProtonMell.com is the best way you can reach out. Also, I do just want to say we will be live streaming the UFO congressional hearing this Wednesday.
Starting point is 01:03:50 on my birthday, actually, we will be probably live 11 a.m. The hearing starts at 11.30 a.m. Eastern Standard Time. We will be streaming on our X channel. Now, Investigate Earth Podcasts. Make sure you go follow us over there. And we'll try to stream to our YouTube, but it depends on if YouTube will let us stream or not. So just make sure you are following our X. And then we're also going to be doing spaces over on X.
Starting point is 01:04:11 We got a lot of cool stuff coming over on X that we're really excited about. So make sure you are following all those channels. Sherry, I think that's it. I think so. So guys, save the monkeys and save the beagles. Absolutely. I think it's a very, very important topic that we have to talk about and bring attention to. We will be back very, very soon, probably tomorrow night, actually.
Starting point is 01:04:34 We love you guys. Till next time, peace out. Peace out, guys.

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