Anonymous ID: 112e35 May 20, 2022, 3:33 a.m. No.16309129   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16309118

And then this ties into WHO power grab occurring right now. FFS, Anons, imagine if this board didn’t exist, if we didn’t know wtf was actually coming.

Anonymous ID: 112e35 May 20, 2022, 3:47 a.m. No.16309179   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16309175

It started getting bad when povaxx info popped up. Imagine what the shill command centers look like as truth gonna get dropped here. You can’t hide the truth, clowns, it’s against the laws of nature. Tick tock

Anonymous ID: 112e35 May 20, 2022, 4:07 a.m. No.16309221   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16309214

Gates Foundation Pledges $10 Billion For Vaccines

 

The $34 billion Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is more than doubling its vaccine portfolio – already its largest focus.

 

The Gateses announced today at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, that they plan to spend $10 billion on vaccine development and deployment over the next decade. "We must make this the decade of vaccines," Microsoft founder Bill Gates says.

 

Since its inception in 1994 the Gates Foundation has spent $4.5 billion on vaccine programs. The new $1 billion-a-year pledge is $200 million over its current annual outlay for vaccine work.

 

"We're continuing to ramp up the amount we're spending on vaccines because it's been such a good investment," Bill Gates tells NPR in an interview.

 

Successes so far in getting established and new vaccines out into poor countries and into children's arms, Gates says, show that "even in the poorest countries vaccine delivery can be done well."

 

Gates points out that globally 79 percent of children currently receive all three recommended doses of DTP (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis) vaccine.

 

A goal of the foundation's expanded funding is to raise that to 90 percent coverage. Another goal is to get comparable vaccination coverage among children in the poorest nations for measles, HiB (Hemophilus influenza type B), pneumococcal disease, rotavirus (the leading cause of childhood diarrheal death), and, after 2014, a 50 percent effective malaria vaccine that's now in final human trials.

 

If those goals are met, Gates says, 8.7 million more children will avoid death from vaccine-preventable diseases. That comes from unpublished projections by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

 

Gates says some of the foundation's new money will go toward work on vaccines against AIDS and tuberculosis. "But we don't know when those breakthroughs will take place," he says. "So when we say we'll save more than 8 million additional lives, we're not putting anything in for those. It's just the vaccines that are out and available or in their final phase of testing."

 

Here are other excerpts from NPR's interview with Bill Gates:

 

NPR: What went into your decision to increase vaccine outlays at this time?

 

GATES: Well, over the last 10 years we got several new vaccines out into poor countries through a partner called the GAVI Alliance…. We saw that even in the very poorest countries, vaccine delivery can be done well. And the number of scientists working on new vaccines has gone up… partly because of donations that we and others have come along with. A lot of young scientists are inspired to work in these areas, so we wanted to show that we have this long-term commitment. It will go to diseases that affect the poorest disproportionately.

 

NPR: What will this fund that otherwise would not get funded?

 

GATES: Well, certainly a malaria vaccine wouldn't happen without our giving money, and others as well. But we're one of the big funders of this. A TB vaccine would hardly be worked on. An AIDS vaccine would have far less in terms of resources.

 

NPR: How does this 10-year, $10 billion pledge rank in terms of commitment to a single area of health spending?

 

GATES: Well, if you take the National Institutes of Health, they spend, say, $5 billion a year on cancer. For rich-world diseases, both the U.S. government and pharmaceutical companies have very large numbers that they spend. But if you take something focused on developing world diseases such as malaria and diarrhea, this would be the biggest commitment that anyone's ever made.

 

NPR: What are the biggest obstacles to acceptance and adoption of new vaccines?

 

GATES: Each country is very conservative about adding something new… and then you've got a delivery challenge. You have to have enough refrigerators and backup generators and personnel involved in that delivery system. So we're going to have to get the approvals, we're going to have to scale up the delivery capacity…. A lot of things have to go right. But there's nothing more effective in terms of its impact. And then as you improve health you also have this huge benefit that people tend to have smaller families. So all your challenges whether it's the environment, or food, education, jobs those become possible when you improve health.

Anonymous ID: 112e35 May 20, 2022, 4:09 a.m. No.16309224   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/us-west-risk-power-blackouts-summer-regulator-warns

 

Tens of millions of Americans could be thrown into a summer of hell as a megadrought, heatwaves, and reduced power generation could trigger widespread rolling electricity blackouts from the Great Lakes to the West Coast, according to Bloomberg, citing a new report from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), a regulatory body that manages grid stability.

 

NERC warned power supplies in the Western US could be strained this summer as a historic drought reduces hydroelectric power generation due to falling reservoir levels and what's expected to be an unseasonably hot summer. Compound the hellacious weather backdrop with grids decommissioning fossil fuel power plants to fight climate change and their inability to bring on new green power generation, such as solar, wind, and batteries, in time, is a perfect storm waiting to happen that will produce electricity deficits that may force power companies into rolling blackouts for stability purposes.

 

 

The regulatory body pointed out that supply-chain woes are delaying major Southwest solar projects, while some coal plants have trouble procuring supplies because of increased exports. They said there's also an increasing threat of cyberattacks from Russia.

 

By region, the Midwest power grid will be extremely tight. Across the Western US, power generation capacity has declined 2.3% since last summer, even as demand is expected to increase. Grids in the region may have to source power from neighboring grids as extreme heat will cause people to crank up their air conditioners. A situation of low wind speeds could trigger blackouts, according to NERC. They outlined how the Midwest could face power shortfalls due to the removal of power capacity from retiring fossil fuel power plants.

 

NERC issued a similar warning last year, stating power grids that serve 40% of the US population were at risk of blackouts. One year later, there was only one notable blackout last June during a heatwave in the Pacific Northwest that left 9,000 customers without power. But with reduced electricity generation capacity outpacing new green power sources, the risks of blackouts are increasing this year.

 

In Texas, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT)has already warned multiple times of grid stress as early summer-like heatwaves sent temperatures in certain parts of the state into triple-digit territory.

 

California's grid operators have also warned of rising blackout threats for the next three summers as the state transitions to greener forms of energy. The drought and shrinking reservoir levels have reduced hydroelectric power generation on top of decommissioned fossil fuel power plants. "We know that reliability is going to be difficult in this time of transition," said Alice Reynolds, president of the California Public Utilities Commission, during a May 6 press conference.

 

NERC's report is an eye-opener for those living in the Western US. Many households face out-of-control inflation, soaring fuel prices, and food shortages ahead of what could be a summer of unrest as the Biden administration is bracing for a wave of violence upon the Supreme Court's overturn of Roe V. Wade.

 

America is slipping into the abyss as households get a taste of what it's like to live in Venezuela. It's not that far off from what people are experiencing today: soaring inflation, shortages, a ruling regime which so many claim was not elected by the majority and soon, rolling blackouts.