Anonymous ID: fc598d Dec. 14, 2021, 2:01 p.m. No.15193592   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3670 >>3727 >>3873 >>4096

>>15193463

Many people have thought Shermans were killed over HCQ production in their factory, but this is the first post i've seen that discussed that showed evidence of this possibility posted PRIOR TO Covid outbreak. Was skeptical of the idea that they would be killed simply bc factory mfr'd HCQ - lots of factories do. But if they came out with a NEW drug, to market to third world (poor) nations that was also potentially effective against covid, it would be heavily PROMOTED. That would make them a target.

 

notable

 

I'm DIGGING right now on another followup article on Apo-TriAvir. Will post soon.

Anonymous ID: fc598d Dec. 14, 2021, 2:28 p.m. No.15193727   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3729 >>3873 >>3980 >>3987 >>4059 >>4096

>>15193463

>Went back to old screen shots. Found this, >Sherman murders, Bill Clinton connection.

>Sherman’s were killed to stop their new anti viral drug, THE CURE TO UPCOMING COVID 19 PANDEMIC. Interesting!

>>15193592

>>15193670

 

What i found: an article for which your post was a reply - see CAP. There is another article that describes Apo-Triavir situation in more details. Also CAPPED.

 

New Motive Found in Murder of Canadian Pharma Billionaires — Largest Producers of Generic Virus Cure

By Thornton Parsons -

April 6, 2020

 

As the world seeks supplies of the old malaria drug that could also be the cure for Corona Virus, the mysterious death of its biggest producer could now have new meaning.

 

Two years after billionaire Toronto businessman Barry Sherman and his wife, Honey, were found brutally murdered in their home as a realtor was showing the house to prospective buyers, the actual production of their pharmaceutical company is adding some motive to what’s been an unsolved killing.

 

Sherman’s company, Apotex, was a leading Canadian manufacturer of generic drugs, and the largest producer of Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate, in their case, the APO-Hydroxyquine 200MG tablet…..

 

https://qm.news/new-motive-found-in-murder-of-canadian-pharma-billionaires-largest-producers-of-generic-virus-cure/

 

THERE ARE TWO REPLIES TO THIS ARTICLE - ONE IS THE STUFF FROM POST >>15193463

see CAPS

 

https://www.crazydaysandnights.net/2018/11/blind-items-revealed-9-anniversary-month.html

Basically, Shermans bribed/donated to Bill Clinton to get a drug [Apo-TriAvir] into Rwanda, and when caught for the bribes, he gave up the group he was working with, The Church, which killed him.

 

https://cen.acs.org/articles/86/i16/Supplying-Drugs-Worlds-Poor.html

Supplying Drugs To The World's Poor

WTO process enables poor countries to get patented drugs at reduced prices, but it's seldom used

by Jean-François Tremblay

April 21, 2008

 

Last month, India's Cancer Patients Aid Association (CPAA), with the support of several other nongovernmental organizations, began a campaign to lobby the government of India to remove patent protection on about 20 cancer drugs supplied by international pharmaceutical companies. According to CPAA, too many Indian cancer patients cannot afford the patent-protected drugs they need to survive.

 

"For the first time, we can see that in India patent protection is blocking access to treatments that are essential," says Leena Menghaney, the Indian coordinator of the Access to Essential Medicines campaign organized by the charity Doctors Without Borders, widely known by its French acronym MSF. MSF supports the CPAA campaign, she says, as well as the removal of patent protection for other life-saving drugs.

 

If the Indian government buckles under pressure from these organizations and frees some drugs from patent protection against the wishes of patent holders, it will be doing something called compulsory licensing.

 

All members of the World Trade Organization have the right to resort to compulsory licensing of under WTO's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights. In 2001, the U.S. came close to compulsory licensing of the drug ciprofloxacin when it was stymied in its negotiations with Bayer to obtain large supplies at a reduced price. Canada operated a system of compulsory licensing for all drugs from the 1920s to the 1980s but is now in line with international standards.

 

The world's poorest countries almost never resort to compulsory licensing, even though they are the ones most likely to face health emergencies and the ones least able to pay for expensive drugs. Their reserve in using compulsory licensing is surprising given that the WTO agreements contain special provisions that theoretically make it easier for very poor countries to import patented drugs.

 

According to Menghaney, poor countries have a pressing need for patent-protected drugs. In the case of HIV/AIDS, for example, she says the first drugs invented to fight the disease may have undesirable side effects. More important, she adds, viral resistance to these drugs often develops. To save patients, it becomes vital after a few years of treatment with one of these earlier drugs to switch to a newer, patent-protected one.

 

Paragraph 6 of WTO's Doha Declaration—adopted at a WTO conference in Doha, Qatar, in August 2003—specifies how member countries without a drug industry can implement compulsory licensing by importing from other WTO members. The world's poorest countries are deemed not to have a drug industry in order to make it simpler for them to complete the administrative procedures allowing them to import patented drugs.

 

Rwanda is so far the only country to have successfully implemented paragraph 6. The African nation has satisfied all WTO requirements to import an HIV treatment that is protected by international patents. The drug, named Apo-TriAvir, was developed by the Canadian generic drug firm Apotex, which saw a potentially growing market in compulsory licensing. Apo-TriAvir is a formulation consisting of 300 mg of zidovudine, or AZT; 150 mg of the GlaxoSmithKline drug lamivudine; and 200 mg of the Boehringer Ingelheim drug nevirapine.

 

page 1

Anonymous ID: fc598d Dec. 14, 2021, 2:28 p.m. No.15193729   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3873 >>4096

>>15193727

Sherman DIG, con't.

 

Rwanda is so far the only country to have successfully implemented paragraph 6.

 

The African nation has satisfied all WTO requirements to import an HIV treatment that is protected by international patents. The drug, named Apo-TriAvir, was developed by the Canadian generic drug firm Apotex, which saw a potentially growing market in compulsory licensing. Apo-TriAvir is a formulation consisting of 300 mg of zidovudine, or AZT; 150 mg of the GlaxoSmithKline drug lamivudine; and 200 mg of the Boehringer Ingelheim drug nevirapine.

 

Elie Betito, a spokesman for Apotex, says it was a frustrating two-and-half-year ordeal for his company to win the various approvals it needed to qualify as a supplier to Rwanda. Apotex had to comply with Canada’s Access to Medicines Regime, a set of regulations Canada adopted in 2005 to harmonize its laws with paragraph 6.

 

“It’s a process that the branded drug companies can stop at any time,” Betito says. “We had to deal with three companies, and they had to give approval at every step.” Apotex eventually secured approval to ship a fixed quantity of Apo-TriAvir to Rwanda. But it can’t ship more of the product even if Rwanda indicates that it needs more, Betito adds.

 

Apotex, a privately owned firm, plans to sell its drug to Rwanda at cost, Betito says.

 

But even though the firm incurred expenses in developing a formulation that specifically meets Rwandan needs, he says it is not guaranteed to get the order. Now that all the approvals have been secured by Rwanda and Canada, he adds, the order is going through a tendering process despite the fact that Apotex is the only company in the world to make the drug cocktail.

 

Betito says he finds it incomprehensible that the process enabling Apotex to ship a much-needed drug to a poor country is so complicated. “If 3,000 people per day were dying in Canada from a particular disease, we would not have to go through the rigmarole of lawyers talking to each other seemingly endlessly about getting the drugs,” he says. “Government would do something about it.”

 

https://cen.acs.org/articles/86/i16/Supplying-Drugs-Worlds-Poor.html

 

page 2

Anonymous ID: fc598d Dec. 14, 2021, 2:42 p.m. No.15193793   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3873 >>3954 >>4096

>>15193670

i don't remember the story about bringing HCQ to Haiti or anything about the Shermans witnessing massive fraud by Clintons. But it's easy to envision if they were truly altruistic:

 

They go to Haiti to genuinely help and find a cesspool of corruption. Mebbe feel like they are over their heads and are afraid to come forward initially. Or become somehow complicit (at least in appearance). Eventually decide to confess but confide in the wrong people.

Anonymous ID: fc598d Dec. 14, 2021, 2:50 p.m. No.15193840   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3852 >>3862

>>15193800

>>15193812

>bad treatment of dads

 

had a fren who had to write an essay to get into college back when there was actually some point.

 

"Everyone is some kind of minority. What kind are you? Describe and discuss."

 

It's true that dads get crapped on - and it's important to deal with anger (etc) that results. In the end, each of us gotta figure out how to deal with unfairness in life, since there's plenty of it.

 

Godspeed anons.