Anonymous ID: c7b88b Feb. 15, 2022, 4:30 p.m. No.15636960   🗄️.is 🔗kun

EPISODE 100! Viva & Barnes LIVE - So Much Law Stuffs!

 

Started streaming 11 minutes ago

 

Viva Frei

506K subscribers

 

We shall be discussing the other stuffs in the law world, above and beyond the Revolution that is currently raging in Canada.

 

https://youtu.be/zhzOj3671n4

Anonymous ID: c7b88b Feb. 15, 2022, 5:15 p.m. No.15637325   🗄️.is 🔗kun

FDA Exec on Camera Reveals Future COVID Policy "Biden Wants To Inoculate As Many People As Possible"

 

 

Feb 15, 2022

 

Project Veritas

1.46M subscribers

 

  • FDA Executive Officer, Christopher Cole: “You’ll have to get an annual shot [COVID vaccine]. I mean, it hasn’t been formally announced yet ‘cause they don’t want to, like, rile everyone up.”

 

  • Cole on President Joe Biden: “Biden wants to inoculate as many people as possible.”

 

  • Cole on plans to approve vaccine for toddlers: “They're not going to not approve [emergency use authorization for children five years old or less].”

 

  • Cole on pharmaceutical companies: “There’s a money incentive for Pfizer and the drug companies to promote additional vaccinations.”

 

  • Cole on the financial incentive for pharmaceutical companies: “It’ll be recurring fountain of revenue. It might not be that much initially, but it’ll be recurring if they can if they can get every person required at an annual vaccine, that is a recurring return of money going into their company.”

 

  • FDA Official Statement: "The person purportedly in the video does not work on vaccine matters and does not represent the views of the FDA."

 

[WASHINGTON, D.C. – Feb. 15, 2022] Food and Drug Administration [FDA] Executive Officer, Christopher Cole, inadvertently revealed that his agency will eventually announce that annual COVID-19 vaccinations will become policy.

 

Cole is an Executive Officer heading up the agency’s Countermeasures Initiatives, which plays a critical role in ensuring that drugs, vaccines, and other measures to counter infectious diseases and viruses are safe. He made the revelations on a hidden camera to an undercover Project Veritas reporter.

 

Cole indicates that annual COVID-19 shots isn’t probable – but certain. When pushed on how he knows an annual shot will become policy, Cole states, “Just from everything I’ve heard, they [FDA] are not going to not approve it.”

 

The footage, which is part one of a two-part series on the FDA, also contains soundbites from Cole about the financial incentives pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer have to get the vaccine approved for annual usage.

 

“It’ll be recurring fountain of revenue,” Cole said in the hidden camera footage. “It might not be that much initially, but it’ll recurring if they can if they can get every person required at an annual vaccine, that is a recurring return of money going into their company.”

 

Perhaps the most explosive part of the footage is the moment where Cole brazenly talks about the impact that an Emergency Use Authorization has on overcoming the regulatory concerns of mandating vaccines on children.

 

“They’re all approved under an emergency just because it’s not as impactful as some of the other approvals,” Cole said when asked if he thought there was “really an emergency for kids.”

 

Cole, who claims his role with the FDA is to ensure the agency uses a framework of safety, security, and effectiveness as a part of its preparedness and response protocol, specifically cited concerns over “long term effects, especially with someone younger.”

 

https://youtu.be/6nSXHrmOy8o

Anonymous ID: c7b88b Feb. 15, 2022, 5:24 p.m. No.15637372   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7410

>>15637126

that yellowcake in Iraq was shipped near Ottawa. Deep River Reactor I believe. did a dig on it a few years ago

 

Uranium shipped to Montreal from Iraq in top secret mission

 

The Associated Press · Posted: Jul 05, 2008 5:26 PM ET | Last Updated: July 5, 2008

The last major remnant of Saddam Hussein's nuclear program, a huge stockpile of concentrated natural uranium, reached Montreal on Saturday to complete a top-secret U.S. operation.

 

The removal of 550 metric tonnes of "yellowcake," the seed material for higher-grade nuclear enrichment, included a two-week airlift from Baghdad and a voyage across two oceans.

 

The Iraqi government sold the yellowcake to a Canadian uranium producer, Cameco Corp., in a transaction the official described as worth "tens of millions of dollars."

 

A Cameco spokesman, Lyle Krahn, said the yellowcake will be processed at facilities in Ontario for use in energy-producing reactors.

 

"We are pleased … that we have taken [the yellowcake] from a volatile region into a stable area to produce clean electricity," Krahn said.

 

U.S. and Iraqi forces have guarded the 9,300-hectare yellowcake site since its discovery.

 

The deal culminated more than a year of intense diplomatic and military initiatives — kept hushed in fear of ambushes or attacks once the convoys were under way.

 

It also brought relief to U.S. and Iraqi authorities who had worried the cache would reach insurgents or smugglers crossing to Iran to aid their nuclear ambitions.

 

Diplomats and military leaders first weighed the idea of shipping the yellowcake overland to Kuwait's port on the Persian Gulf.

 

Such a route, however, would pass through Iraq's Shiite heartland and be within easy range of extremists.

 

The ship also would need to clear the narrow Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Gulf, where U.S. and Iranian ships often come in close contact.

 

Kuwaiti authorities, too, were reluctant to open their borders to the shipment despite top-level lobbying from Washington.

 

Deal reached earlier this year

The yellowcake still needed a final destination. Iraqi government officials sought buyers on the commercial market, where uranium prices spiked at about $120 per pound last year. It's currently selling for about half that.

 

The Cameco deal was reached earlier this year, the official said.

 

At that point, U.S.-led crews began removing the yellowcake from the Saddam-era containers, some leaking or weakened by corrosion, and reloading the material into about 3,500 secure barrels.

In April, truck convoys started moving the yellowcake from Tuwaitha to Baghdad's international airport.

 

Then, for two weeks in May, it was ferried on 37 flights to Diego Garcia, a speck of British territory in the Indian Ocean where the U.S. military maintains a base.

 

On June 3, an American ship left the island for Montreal.

 

While yellowcake alone is not considered potent enough for a so-called "dirty bomb" — a conventional explosive that disperses radioactive material — it could stir widespread panic if incorporated in a blast.

 

Yellowcake also can be enriched for use in reactors and, at higher levels, nuclear weapons using sophisticated equipment.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/uranium-shipped-to-montreal-from-iraq-in-top-secret-mission-1.742303