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Gates' mosquitoes

Digital DawnGenetically modified mosquitoes at the request of Bill Gates

Digital Dawn - March 01, 2024

Dengue fever jumps 400% in Brazil after the release of genetically modified mosquitoes at the request of Bill Gates.

   

Dengue cases increased fourfold in Brazil in 2024 following the release of millions of genetically modified mosquitoes by the United Nations Global Mosquito Program.

In the first five weeks of 2024, more than 364 cases of dengue infection were reported, according to the country's health ministry, four times more than previous cases during the same period in 000.

The dramatic increase in dengue cases has prompted Brazil to purchase millions of doses of dengue vaccine.

“The rapid spread of dengue fever has caused 40 confirmed deaths,” the ministry said, “and another 265 cases are under investigation.

Brazil purchased 5,2 million doses of the Qdenga dengue vaccine, developed by Japanese drugmaker Takeda, and an additional 1,32 million doses were provided free of charge to the government, according to a ministry statement.

Three Brazilian states have declared emergencies, including the second most populous state, Minas Gerais, and the Federal District, where the capital Brasília is located, which is facing an unprecedented rise in infections.

Brasilia will begin vaccinating children aged 10 to 14 on Friday with Qdenga, the local government said on Wednesday.

Dengue cases in Brasilia since the start of the year have exceeded the total for all of 2023, with an infection rate of 1 cases per 625 inhabitants, while the national average is only than 100.”

The Guardian

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vaxx mosquitoes

The DefenderMosquitoes: mass vaccination without consent

The Defender – August 10, 2023

Genetically modified mosquito vaccines could lead to mass vaccination without consent, warns Kim Iversen.

   

On a recent episode of “The Kim Iversen Show,” Ms. Iversen spoke about a vaccine trial funded by the National Institute of Health involving the use of genetically engineered mosquitoes to immunize humans against malaria.

Ms Iversen told viewers she doubted the researcher's claims that mosquitoes would not be used to vaccinate people against their consent.

A team of researchers from the University of Washington, led by Sean Murphy, MD, Ph.D., conducted the study, which was published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

Researchers have genetically modified the Plasmodium falciparum parasite, which causes malaria, by deleting several genes to create a "minor version of malaria" unable to cause disease in humans. The mosquitoes were exposed to the parasite before 200 of them were allowed to bite each participant, three to five times over a 30-day period - enough to create antibodies that could last up to six months.

Mr Murphy and his co-authors said they had used mosquitoes – rather than syringes – to cut costs and had no plans to use the technology to mass vaccinate millions of people without their consent.

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