Anonymous ID: ebadc3 April 8, 2020, 10:06 a.m. No.8723219   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3270 >>3354 >>3613

>>8722283 (lb)

The Wistar institute

4 part dig. Dismissed as word vomit yesterday.

 

4/4

The Wistar Institute pioneered the use of aborted fetal cells in vaccine development in the 1960s.

https://ifapray.org/blog/what-is-the-secret-that-wistar-institute-is-hiding/

 

"In the heart of Philadelphia, the secret work of Wistar Institute, the work of aborted baby “WI38” was going on while they pretended to be against abortion. Once the Wistar Institute was successful in patenting their formula for aborted fetal cells, they partnered with the World Health Organization. They then flew Hayflick around to different countries to teach people his “recipe” using [aborted] baby lungs so countries could make their own cell lines and vaccines.

 

Today, over 300 million doses have been injected in humans on earth. Every time a shot is given, profit is made. Many think of Washington, D.C. as the center of evil. However, Satan plays deceptive games for those unaware. This company, this location, IS the high place of extreme wickedness. The [vaccinations] of impurities of the dead forced into HOLY bodies is NOT acceptable. Messing with God’s DNA the HOLY NATION will no longer tolerate."

 

A Wistar rat https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laboratory_rat

 

The Wistar rat is an outbred albino rat. This breed was developed at the Wistar Institute in 1906 for use in biological and medical research, and is notably the first rat developed to serve as a model organism at a time when laboratories primarily used the common house mouse (Mus musculus). More than half of all laboratory rat strains are descended from the original colony established by physiologist Henry Donaldson, scientific administrator Milton J. Greenman, and genetic researcher/embryologist Helen Dean King.[19][20]

 

The Wistar rat is currently one of the most popular rats used for laboratory research. It is characterized by its wide head, long ears, and a tail length that is always less than its body length. The Sprague Dawley rat and Long–Evans rat were developed from Wistar rats. Wistar rats are more active than others like Sprague Dawley rats. The spontaneously hypertensive rat and the Lewis rat are other well-known stocks developed from Wistar rats.

 

The Wistar Institute today

 

6 Apr 2020 - A potential coronavirus vaccine funded by Bill Gates is set to begin testing in people, with the first patient expected to get it today.

https://www.businessinsider.com/inovio-coronavirus-vaccine-trial-starts-in-philadelphia-kansas-city-2020-4

Researchers from the Weiner Laboratory work on a coronavirus vaccine at The Wistar Institute

Healthy volunteers in Philadelphia and Kansas City, Missouri, will begin testing an experimental coronavirus vaccine starting this week.

Inovio Pharmaceuticals, a small biotech in Pennsylvania, received regulatory clearance to begin testing. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and other nonprofits have poured funding into Inovio's vaccine project.

The biotech said it expects to have early safety data by late summer and aims to produce 1 million doses by the end of 2020.

Anonymous ID: ebadc3 April 8, 2020, 10:37 a.m. No.8723613   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3661

>>8722383 (lb)

>>8723219

3/4

 

Since 1972, Wistar has been a National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Cancer Center and its application for renewal of the Cancer Center Support Grant received the highest rating of "exceptional" in two consecutive terms in 2013 and 2018.[3] Known worldwide for vaccine development, some of the Institute's accomplishments are its contributions to the creation of vaccines for rubella (German Measles), rotavirus and rabies.

 

Immunology and vaccine development

 

The Wistar Vaccine & Immunotherapy Center advances new generation DNA-based technologies for prevention of infectious diseases and for cancer immunotherapy.

 

The HIV-1 research program at Wistar is co-leading a consortium of 30 of the nation's top HIV investigators, which in 2016 received a nearly $23 million grant from the National Institutes of Health for HIV cure research, to test combinations of novel immunotherapies in clinical trials.

 

Discoveries at Wistar have led to the creation of vaccines that protect children and adults from widespread, debilitating, and life-threatening diseases and have saved countless lives in the U.S. and abroad:

 

A vaccine against rubella (German measles) developed in 1969 at Wistar has been successfully used worldwide since the 1970s and is administered in the U.S. as part of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) combination vaccine. The Wistar-developed vaccine led the charge in the eradication of rubella, which was declared eradicated in the U.S. in 2004.

Two rabies vaccines were developed at Wistar and are used worldwide to prevent rabies-related deaths in humans and wildlife. One is administered as a post-exposure treatment and is nearly 100% effective in preventing fatal rabies infection. It is also given to people at high risk of exposure, including veterinarians and wildlife officers. This vaccine, which was developed at Wistar in the 1960s and ‘70s, has helped to make rabies-related human death a rarity in the U.S. and many other countries. Another Wistar vaccine, licensed in 1995, is used to prevent rabies infection in wildlife.

Wistar scientists are co-creators of a rotavirus vaccine that was licensed by the Food & Drug Administration in 2016 and is routinely administered in the United States and around the world. The rotavirus vaccine contributes to saving U.S. children from 250,000 emergency room visits and 70,000 hospitalizations each year.

Wistar contributed technology critical to the development of the first vaccine for the Zika virus approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to be tested in humans.

Anonymous ID: ebadc3 April 8, 2020, 10:42 a.m. No.8723661   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>>8722383 (lb)

>>>8723219

>>8723613

2/4

1761 - Grandson Caspar Wistar the Younger, born.

1777 - Caspar Wistar the Younger develops an interest in medicine after helping wounded troops during the Battle of Germantown, PA in the Revolutionary War

He studied medicine, first at the University of Pennsylvania (receiving his Bachelor of Medicine degree in 1782), and then at the University of Edinburgh (receiving his Doctor of Medicine degree in 1786). While in Scotland he was, for two successive years, president of the Royal Medical Society of Edinburgh, and also president of a society for the further investigation of natural history.

 

He was an early promoter of vaccination. During the yellow fever epidemic of 1793, he suffered an attack of the disease contracted while caring for his patients.

 

It was his habit to throw open his house once every week in the winter, and at these gatherings students, citizens, scientists, and travelers met and discussed subjects of interest. These assemblies, celebrated in the annals of Philadelphia under the title of Wistar parties, were continued long after his death by other residents of that city.[4]

 

The American College of Physicians elected him a fellow in 1787, and he was appointed one of its censors in 1794, which place he retained until his death. In 1787 he was elected to membership of the American Philosophical Society, was chosen its vice-president in 1795, and on the resignation of Thomas Jefferson, in 1815, served as president until his death. He also served as president of the Society for the Abolition of Slavery, succeeding Benjamin Rush.

 

The botanist Thomas Nuttall named the genus Wisteria in his honour (some call it Wistaria but the misspelling is conserved under the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature). The Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology at the University of Pennsylvania, founded in 1892 by his great-nephew, Isaac Jones Wistar, is also named for Caspar Wistar.

 

Wistar was a friend of Thomas Jefferson, with whom he worked to identify bones of the megalonyx[5] and through whom he sent Meriwether Lewis some recommendations for scientific inquiry on the Lewis and Clark expedition.[5]

 

1892 - The Wistar Institute founded as a independent, nonprofit research institution in biomedical science, with special expertise in oncology, immunology, infectious disease and vaccine research. Located in the University City section of Philadelphia, Wistar was founded in 1892 as America's first nonprofit institution solely focused on biomedical research and training. Named after Caspar Wistar, M.D., a well-respected Philadelphia physician, The Wistar Institute is the nation's first independent medical research facility, founded in 1892 by Isaac Jones Wistar , great-nephew of Dr. Wistar and a prominent lawyer and Civil War Brigadier General who made a long-lasting contribution to the city of Philadelphia and to biomedical science.

 

>>8723354

Sorry Baker, working on a bun. Having a hard time getting it all posted to 1 bread.>>8723354