First Cases of Malaria Confirmed in 20 Years in States Where Gates' Funded Company Released Millions of MosquitosMysterious cases of locally-acquired malaria are popping up, coinciding with the release of millions of mosquitos from a Gates funded company and the new Gates-funded malaria vaccine.A new potentially manufactured health crisis is on the horizon—just in time for a malaria vaccine funded by Bill Gates to hit the market and what seems like minutes after a Gates-funded company released millions of genetically modified mosquitos into the same states where cases occurred. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, five cases of malaria—four in Texas and one in Florida—were recently confirmed. This is the first time the “potentially fatal mosquito-borne disease” has been locally acquired in 20 years. Malaria is a disease caused by a parasite that is spread to humans through the bites of infected mosquitoes. What’s purely coincidental is that 750 million genetically modified (GM) mosquitos in 2022 were released in the Florida Keys, and in 2021, GM mosquitos were also released in Texas. This followed an earlier release of 144,000 genetically modified mosquitoes in the Florida Keys by British biotech firm Oxitec to combat transmission of diseases like Zika and dengue fever, both of which had vaccines in development and accompanying headlines prepping potential customers with fear. In its 2022 letter approving Oxitec's plan, the Environmental Protection Agency approved the additional release of up to 2.4 million GM adult male mosquitoes and eggs in Monroe County, Florida, and several counties in California. The mosquito OX5034 was supposedly altered to produce female offspring that die in the larval stage—long before they are large enough to bite or spread disease. However, like COVID-19 vaccines, this is entirely experimental. We were told COVID-19 vaccines were safe, prevented transmission, and worked—none of which was true. It must be a coincidence that from 2003-2023 there wasn’t one case of Malaria spread by mosquitos and then came a Bill Gates-funded company to solve a problem that didn’t exist, and suddenly cases of malaria are occurring where mosquitos were released. The solution? A Gates-funded vaccine called “RTS,S,” (no, that is not a type error) with an impressive 40% efficacy tested (once again) on defenseless children in Africa. Although it’s 30% below the World Health Organization’s required threshold for effectiveness, vaccines are the only pharmaceutical products with no adverse side effects—and this vaccine is predicted to save thousands of lives at the expense of none. The Gates Foundation invested hundreds of millions of dollars in fighting malaria over the last 20 years. “Over the past two decades, the collective efforts of the global malaria community have dramatically reduced the global burden of malaria, but progress has stalled in recent years,” wrote Philip Welkhoff, the director for malaria at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, in an email to VOX. Two other malaria vaccines are in the pipeline: the University of Oxford’s R21 malaria vaccine and an mRNA malaria vaccine that has already been tested in six-month-old infants. With the wild success of COVID-19 vaccines, the rapid approval process, no accountability, and the ability to have gene therapy products skirt by under the classification of a “vaccine” (which requires far fewer studies), it’s a “win.” Of course, we have hydroxychloroquine, which has easily and effectively prevented and treated malaria for 60 years, but we can’t have people resorting to cheap and effective drugs associated with little to no adverse events to treat their ailments. If you have the time and want more of the backstory, look into how mosquitoes have been used and engineered for biological warfare. You’re currently a free subscriber to Megan Redshaw's Newsletter. Upgrade your subscription to get the full experience and support Megan’s work. |