Anonymous ID: 46ba90 Aug. 16, 2022, 4:04 a.m. No.17401704   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1789 >>1895 >>2093 >>2253

>>17401393 (PB) NIH holds the patent to the spike protein and sequence, and they license that to #Moderna

 

REMINDER

repost of old digg: Gary Nabel is Fauci's former chief of vaccines. 'Betsy', his wife was on the Board of Moderna.

 

Gary Nable/Elizabeth Nable husband and wife from Elizabeth "Betsy" Nable Wiki:

During her residency, Elizabeth met Gary Nabel, then an intern with an MD/PhD in Immunology from Harvard University. Their first date was to settle a bet about a patient's diagnosis, and Gary won. They went for dinner at a restaurant in Cambridge, Massachusetts and ended up in the middle of an armed robbery. Elizabeth admired the calm way in which Gary handled the situation, and a year later they were married.

 

Nasdaq press release dated 3/2021:

Moderna, Inc., (Nasdaq: MRNA) a biotechnology company pioneering messenger RNA (mRNA) therapeutics and vaccines, today announced that Elizabeth (Betsy) Nabel, M.D. has been appointed to the Company's Board of Directors.

 

Dr. Nabel was previously a member of Moderna's Board of Directors from December 2015 to July 2020. She resigned from the Moderna Board in July 2020 to alleviate any potential concern about the conduct or the outcome of the COVID-19 vaccine trial when Brigham and Women's Hospital was identified by NIH as one of the clinical sites for the Phase 3 trial. Through February 2021, she was President of Brigham Health, which includes Brigham and Women's Hospital, Brigham and Women's Faulkner Hospital, and the Brigham and Women's Physician Organization, a position she held from 2010.

 

Jan 6, 2021:

Betsy Nabel, M.D., is stepping down as the president of Brigham and Women's Hospital to enter biotech. Nabel is reportedly set to join her husband, the former chief scientific officer of Sanofi, at a stealthy new biotech startup.

Brigham appointed Nabel, a cardiologist and biomedical researcher, as its president in 2010. During her 11-year spell at the head of Brigham, Nabel tried to increase the hospital's role in developing health technologies, including by establishing a Translational Accelerator to support researchers with ideas for new interventions. …

 

The action failed to quell the criticism. Nabel came under fire for selling $8.5 million in Moderna stock in the run-up to her resignation from the board. Like other Moderna shareholders, Nabel benefited from surges in the biotech's stock as it emerged as a leader in the COVID-19 vaccine race. This week, the Lown Institute included Nabel in the "Shkreli Awards," which recognize "the worst actors of the US health system" for "profiteering and dysfunction in healthcare."

 

May 25, 2016:

Dr. Elizabeth Nabel, president of Boston's Brigham and Women's Hospital and one of the nation's most prominent medical executives, was part of a National Football League effort to "steer funding" for a landmark concussion study away from a group of respected brain researchers, according to a congressional committee report that was sharply critical of the league.

The report found that the NFL "inappropriately attempted to influence" the National Institutes of Health's grant selection process.

Nabel, who also serves as the NFL's chief health and medical advisor, told STAT she "had no intention of influencing" the NIH process. "I made my neutrality quite clear," she said in a statement.

 

~~~~

So quite a coincidence that the wife of NIH's Director of Vaccines, Gary Nabel, sold Moderna stock for a mere $8.5 Million in 2020 while the institution she was president of was named as a Phase 3 clinical trial site for the Moderna vaccine.

 

https://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/dr.-elizabeth-Nabel-rejoins-modernas-board-of-directors-2021-03-10

archived: https://archive.ph/JfqzZ

https://www.fiercebiotech.com/biotech/Nabel-to-leave-brigham-to-join-ex-sanofi-cso-husband-at-biotech-startup

archived: https://archive.ph/jrQTU

Gary Nable Wiki archived: https://archive.ph/kELbk

NFL grant: https://archive.ph/nh0pe

Eliz. Nabel wiki: https://archive.ph/0ySO2

Anonymous ID: 46ba90 Aug. 16, 2022, 7:27 a.m. No.17402246   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17402098

According to the book “Adventure Therapy: Theory, Practice, and Research” (Gass, Gillis, and Russell, 2012), the first Wilderness Therapy (WT) program (Aspen Achievement Academy) was founded in 1988 in Loa, Utah. This program, inspired by military recruit training in a wilderness environment, is supposed to be the first one that had a clinician (Madolyn Liebing, Ph.D.) who provided so-called individual therapy. Almost 35 years later, what can be said about Wilderness Therapy programs? Are they effective? Are they safe? How much do they cost?

 

Before talking about whether or not WT is an appropriate way to help struggling children and teenagers, it’s probably best to start with describing what is Wilderness Therapy.

 

Teenagers sent to WT programs are most often transported against their will from their home to a place they were not informed about. The “Escort Service” agency usually organizes the intervention in the middle of the night to surprise the teen and avoid too much resistance. Restraints, handcuffs and sometimes electric shockers can be used to control the teen and force them to comply with two or more strangers without knowing where they are going.

 

When the teen finally reaches the destination (which is usually a forest or a desert and can be located on the other side of the country), they are strip-searched, given a uniform, and introduced to their new peers.. Depending on the program, the teen may be ignored by the rest of the group and forced to remain silent for the first few days or weeks.

 

These “therapeutic” programs are based on the “Tough Love” approach and are supposed to include “occupational therapy” interventions. The teens spend their days hiking and are meant to learn how to survive in the wild (how to build a fire, how to find food or water etc.). At night, their shoes are usually taken from them to prevent them from trying to run away.

 

much moar at (archived) link:

https://archive.ph/w8Qxo

 

Article references "‘It’s beyond cruel’: Inside an N.C. wilderness therapy program for teens" Vid on website timed out, but article archived here:

https://archive.ph/UNzfT