Anonymous ID: 0d319d Oct. 31, 2018, 4:47 a.m. No.3673943   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3953

Red pill tactic # 8

 

It took 40 years of subversive cultist programming to shrink our vocabulary, corrupt our values and dull our curiosity. Entertainment and news has been used to mislead and betray us where its purpose is to encourage an enlighten us. There is no human being alive without purpose. 2018 is the greatest year in human history. https://qanon (dot) pub

Anonymous ID: 0d319d Oct. 31, 2018, 5:30 a.m. No.3674130   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>3674059

Cultists also captured NIH and developed a culture of mediocrity. Anons know, for "mediocre" read" "satanist cult criminals"

 

Irving Weissman M.D., Ludwig professor for Clinical Investigation of Cancer research at Stanford and director of the Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine there says, “We have a perfect storm at the NIH now, sadly, in that mediocre people get to judge whether the experiments will work, and so, as money has fallen back … it becomes more and more critical that the money that is spent should go to the most adept experimenters.” Weissman, considered by many scientists to be the father of modern stem-cell biology, says that what’s happening now, with the NAPA plan, “is just the opposite.”

 

A molecular neurobiologist less senior than Weissman and more vulnerable to retaliation at this stage of his career told me bluntly in a recent email that the billions spent on decades of Alzheimer’s research “wasn’t spent on funding a large basket of ideas and looking under every rock” because “NIH is in the habit of funding the same old tired ideas from the usual suspects.” The same scientist added that the National Alzheimer’s Plan is “run by the same group of NIH-connected people who have been running it (right off a cliff) for the last decade.” This neurobiologist, who did post-doctoral work at the Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry in Germany, also noted that the plan now limits “who can apply for grants to a ‘pre-screened pool’ of investigators.” These are the same ones characterized as “mediocre,” by the father of modern stem-cell biology, Irving Weissman.