Anonymous ID: 1d9b23 Nov. 30, 2018, 7:37 a.m. No.4085382   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5392

Our tax money for some sick perverted experiment? This is inhumane, outrageously satanic and happening with our tax dollars.

Part 1

$13,799,501 Federal Contract Requires UC San Francisco to Obtain Aborted-Baby Parts to Humanize Mice

 

By Terence P. Jeffrey | October 17, 2018 | 5:03 PM EDT

 

(CNSNews.com) - A federal contract that the National Institutes of Health signed with the University of California at San Francisco requires UCSF to obtain body parts from unborn babies to make at least two types of “humanized mice,” according to “the statement of work” included in the contract solicitation published by NIH.

 

“The actual total amount of this contract, including all options, is $13,799,501 for a full performance period through December 5, 2020,” the NIH said in response to an inquiry from CNSNews.com. “We have obligated $9,554,796 to date.”

 

This NIH contract was originally signed with UCSF for a one-year period starting on Dec. 6, 2013 with the government retaining the option to renew the contract for up to six additional one-year periods running through Dec. 5, 2020. The next renewal deadline is Dec. 5 of this year.

 

The contract–using federal tax dollars–creates a demand for organs taken from late-term aborted babies and its fulfillment is dependent on the continued legality of late-term abortions.

 

 

Up to 24 Weeks in Gestational Age

 

A 2017 journal article said that the human fetal intestines used to create “SCID-hu gut mice” in research funded by this contract “were obtained from women with normal pregnancies before elective termination for nonmedical reasons.” The article said the intestines came from babies 18 to 24 weeks in gestational age.

 

 

The passage above from a Feb. 27, 2017 article in Pathogens describes how research conducted under the NIH contract with UCSF used intestines from babies aborted at 18 to 24 weeks in gestational age.

 

Similarly, a 2008 journal article describing how the UCSF professor who is the principle investigator for this contract engineers one version of the mouse required by the contract, said the professor used human fetal livers and thymuses taken from babies at 20-to-24 weeks gestational age.

 

The contract—which NIH calls “Humanized Mouse Models for HIV Therapeutics Development”–follows up on a similar contract (“Tissue Based Small Animal Model for HIV Drug Discovery”) that the NIH maintained with UCSF from Dec. 6, 2006 through Dec. 5, 2013.

 

The total value of that previous contract was $14,628,247, according to NIH.

 

While the NIH did respond to CNSNews.com’s inquiry about the monetary value of these two contracts, it did not specifically respond to sixteen questions about its current “Humanized Mouse Models for HIV Therapeutics Development” contract with UCSF. CNSNews.com sent these questions to the Department of Health and Human Services (of which NIH is a part) and UCSF. NIH and the University of California responded with statements.

 

(The sixteen questions CNSNews.com sent to HHS and UCSF and the full statements NIH and the University of California sent in response can be read by clicking here.)

 

 

The NIH's 'Statement of Work'

 

Some details about the actions required by this federal contract are described in the solicitation the NIH put out for the contract on Dec.31, 2012. Additionally, researchers at UCSF have published articles in medical journals that describe research funded by the contract.

 

The NIH solicitation includes a “statement of work” that says the contractor is specifically required to make two different types of “humanized” mice, using “human fetal thymus and liver” in constructing both.

 

The contractor, it says, is required to “[o]btain the necessary human fetal tissues for use under the contract” and to “ensure the quality” of that tissue.

 

 

The passage above from the “Statement of Work” attached to the NIH solicitation for its “Humanized Mouse Models for HIV Therapeutics Development” contract expressly informs the contractor that one function of the contract is to "[o]btain human fetal tissue.”

 

Similarly, the solicitation includes instructions for completing a “technical proposal” the contractor was required to submit. These instructions tell the contractor to ‘[i]dentify the source for fetal human tissues to be used in the model.”

 

https://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/terence-p-jeffrey/13799501-federal-contract-requires-uc-san-francisco-obtain-aborted