Anonymous ID: 900da8 March 15, 2020, 4:24 p.m. No.8429712   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9753

>>8429561

>>8429575

 

china said that US military released it into China…..that is our DS.

 

Trump said we know where it came from and they do too.

He didn't say who 'they' is and he didn't say China.

 

Trump said Xi is doing everything he can to control a bad situation.

 

\why do you think Trump said to check into Hunter Biden's contracts with China?

 

why do you think Trump says CHINA CHINA CHINA.

Our/the DS has been manufacturing viruses for years.. using the chinese to test 'prisoners'

 

it doesn't make sense that the 'chinese' have done all of this on their own.

 

and those fish/meat market stories. are gross…but imho, Trump/we know where it came from and they know we know.

 

Bill GAtes quit MS?

Bill Gates supporting coronavirus drills and vaccines?

right….doing it for China or to China?

Anonymous ID: 900da8 March 15, 2020, 4:44 p.m. No.8429956   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9971 >>0019 >>0066

>>8429869

 

facebook TUNA PANDEMIC

https://www.barrons.com/articles/open-philanthropy-projects-cari-tuna-on-funding-global-health-51569261600

One way that philanthropy can have outsize impact is by focusing on global catastrophic risks. By that I mean low-likelihood events that could be hugely harmful to human well-being on a global scale, which often are neglected by other funders. Global pandemics represent an especially important and neglected risk. We’ve been investing both in policy work and science to promote early detection and effective responses.

 

Cari Tuna co-founded Good Ventures with her husband Dustin Moskovitz (co-founder of Facebook and Asana) in 2011 and is the foundation’s President. She helps set the strategy and oversee the work of the Open Philanthropy Project, which is the primary basis for Good Ventures’ grant decisions.

Anonymous ID: 900da8 March 15, 2020, 4:46 p.m. No.8429971   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8429956

>https://www.barrons.com/articles/open-philanthropy-projects-cari-tuna-on-funding-global-health-51569261600

 

Right now, we’re very excited about the Institute for Protein Design’s work on a universal flu vaccine, which just got a big prize from TED’s Audacious Project, and Target Malaria’s progress in its mosquito gene-drive research. If either of these projects succeed, it would do so much good for so many people around the world. We’re proud to have bet on them early.

Anonymous ID: 900da8 March 15, 2020, 4:51 p.m. No.8430036   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8430019

 

UNIVERSAL FLU VACCINE/FACEBOOK FOUNDER/SEATTLE

The Institute for Protein Design at the University of Washington School of Medicine has been awarded $11.3 million from the Open Philanthropy Project to support the institute’s technological revolution in protein design and support its work on the development of a universal flu vaccine.

It is the San Francisco-based organization's first scientific investment in UW Medicine, and first in the Seattle area, and one of its largest scientific awards to date.

The gift comes in two parts:

$5.6 million to refine and advance Rosetta, the software platform for protein design originally developed at UW

$5.7 million for the institute’s program to develop a universal flu vaccine