Anonymous ID: 59a3c3 March 11, 2018, 8:16 a.m. No.627974   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>627935

The speak wasn’t publicized anywhere else but on here and then on twitter from mainly anons. The feed I was watching (that was continuously interrupted or horrible non focused video) had over 24k watching live. That’s one stream! Multiple platforms had this speech live. I’d love to see the max number of live views and now the total views at a 24 hr time lapse.

They’d are gauging our reach in such a small time frame, which I must say seems very large. Hopefully on the verge of that 10% we need to push our movement over the edge.

Just my opinions of course

Anonymous ID: 59a3c3 March 11, 2018, 8:22 a.m. No.628034   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>627981

When my SO told me about this I gave a look like seriously you don’t find that odd. Even vocalized saying are you fucking serious. The reply I got was “the lady was 89. She was going o die soon enough anyways. Not everything is a conspiracy… perry has enough money to do what she wants. Plus how would perry kill the lady?”

It’s so hard living under the same roof as a non believer. My kid get it’s more than my SO

Anonymous ID: 59a3c3 March 11, 2018, 9:03 a.m. No.628402   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>628341

From 2008, but look where their focal point was. West Africa. What kind of kids do they have in west Africa and what does the cabal need from these types of children?

 

"This is very welcome news," said Kevin Decock, Director, Department of HIV/AIDS, WHO. "It's an important step towards protecting the health of the children of Senegal."

Without care or treatment, half of children born with HIV die by the age of two, and four out of five die by age five. The WHO estimates that 800,000 HIV-positive children are in need of treatment. At the end of 2007, 200,000 had access to treatment, a ten-fold increase in three years. Still, the ratio of access for children, currently 25 percent, remains significantly less than that of adults, 31 percent.

Treatment of infants in the developing world has been challenging due to the added capacity needed for testing, initiation, and treatment of infants. Diagnosing children less than 18 months requires high-cost, centralized testing often made accessible through sample transport systems. A combination of spotty early- infant diagnosis coverage, weak referral of infants into care, poor understanding of pediatric HIV infection, unavailability of infant-friendly ARV formulation, and national and international guidelines all have kept infants from receiving lifesaving ART on a large scale. In the past year, under the strong leadership of national governments, early infant diagnosis has moved from pilot, research-only coverage to significant national public availability, doubling early-infant diagnosis sites across 12 high-volume countries from approximately 150 to over 1200;infant-friendly formulations such as pediatric dispersible fixed dose combinations are available in 29 countries; CHAI, in collaboration with UNITAID, has funded over $50 million dollars of pediatric commodities; the number of ART sites treating children jumped by 70 percent; and pediatric treatment has scaled up from 21,000 to over 135,000 children across all 33 countries in which CHAI's pediatrics program operates This announcement comes at the end of President Clinton's annual trip to Africa, following visits to Clinton Foundation projects in Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Liberia. Today, President Clinton travels from Dakar, Senegal, to Mexico City, where he will address the 2008 International AIDS Conference. President Clinton will discuss the global advances that have been made since 2006 in the fight against HIV/AIDS, key contributions made by the Clinton Foundation, and the steps required in order to achieve universal access and treatment.