Info re: Ghouls open Young Blood transfusion clinic
>>Where does the blood come from, exactly?
>>How do they get it?
>>How do they keep a steady supply of it, in order to run a business using it daily?
>>Sketchy as hell.
Consider Third World Blood farms for a complete picture:
The Official answer seems ok enough. If we can donate blood to save lives, this might qualify, and as biofag, keeping open mind on the research.
HOWEVER, medical/legal mind cautions to have this HIGHLY regulated due to the fact that the "blood farms" and third world "organ farms" that steal children and teens and enslave them to put their organs on the blackmarket donor list will need to be shut down globally, and seriously punished whenever they crop up.
At the moment American hospitals are having seminars on how to locate these organs based on testing the organs as rapidly as possible for the third world parasites, diseases that come with them. The hospitals don't have a choice to pretend that the organ/blood farms don't exist. You put one of these organs in someone, >lawsuit big time.
Just one Sauce of many:
"Blood farming is just one facet of a disturbing international black market that buys and sells various fluids and tissues from the human body. According to a 2013 study by Global Financial Integrity, worldwide organ trafficking is big business, generating between $600 million and $1.2 billion in total annual profits.
In general terms, organ and blood trafficking crime can be divided into 3 broad categories. The first is when traffickers directly force or indirectly deceive victims into unwilling donations. The second encompasses instances in which victims formally or informally agree to sell fluid or tissue before being cheated out of the funds that they were promised. The third category includes individuals who have organs or blood removed without their knowledge while being treated for other real or falsified medical ailments.
In addition to preying upon immigrant populations, organ traffickers and blood farmers typically seek out migrant workers, the homeless, the illiterate, and other vulnerable individuals. A recent United Nations report identified the international organ trade as a highly organized criminal industry that involves a host of offenders, including recruiters, transporters, contractors, and a wide range of medical professionals.
Of the 106,879 global organ transplants that occurred in 2010, as many as 10% are estimated to have involved organs that were obtained through illegal channels."
https://www.medicalbag.com/medicine-abroad/blood-farming-and-illegal-organ-selling/article/472908/