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Re: changes_iv post# 43873

Saturday, 03/05/2022 2:34:49 PM

Saturday, March 05, 2022 2:34:49 PM

Post# of 44690
I think we could do so much good if only we were not in the clutches of animals…

Zyesami (Aviptadil) Therapeutic Description 2022

Zyesami (Aviptadil) is a formulation of synthetic human Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide (VIP), which was first discovered in 1970. VIP is known to target the VPAC1 receptor of the alveolar type II (ATII) cell and protect that cell against all manner of injuries, including smoke inhalation, exposure to stomach acid, and exposure to infectious agents. In addition, VIP prevents apoptosis, blocks cytokines, lowers TNFa levels, reverses CD4/CD8 ratio, and reduces cough and dyspnea in nonclinical and clinical studies.

Although first identified in the intestinal tract, VIP is produced throughout the body, primarily concentrated in the lungs. In addition, VIP has been shown in more than hundreds of peer-reviewed studies to have potent anti-inflammatory/anti-cytokine activity in animal models of respiratory distress, acute lung injury, and inflammation says the Company.

Because of its lack of toxicity and low cost of manufacture compared to proprietary biologics, VIP may be uniquely attractive to those focused on global countermeasures against COVID-19, says the Company.

https://www.precisionvaccinations.com/vaccines/zyesami-aviptadil-therapeutic

After a fabricated pandemic, what else could go wrong???

https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/russia-recommends-fertilizer-makers-halt-all-exports

Bill, can you help???

Hungary is banning grain exports, its agriculture minister told television channel RTL on Friday. Argentina and Turkey also made moves this week to increase their control over local products. And Moldova, albeit a small shipper, temporarily halted exports of wheat, corn and sugar from this month.

Protectionist measures -- which already picked up in recent years as the Covid-19 pandemic sparked worries about local supplies and high prices -- could spell more bad news for global food trade. The war in Ukraine has brought crop shipments from much of the crucial Black Sea region to a halt, heightening fears of shortages of grain and sunflower oil.

Read: Wheat Mounts Historic Week as War Sparks Deepening Supply Fears

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/governments-step-protect-food-supplies-162829874.html

Maybe Bill can help as he helps himself, yes???

All told, the 2017 acquisition of AgCoA and the 2018 acquisition of the 100 Circles tract in the Horse Heaven Hills of Eastern Washington total an investment in farmland assets of more than $690 million. Janiec’s sources said some of the AgCoA assets were quickly sold off, but according to the Land Report 100 Research Team, an estimated 242,000 acres of farmland remained.

Yet farmland assets aren’t the sole component of the Gateses’ landholdings. In 2017, Cascade Investment bought a “significant stake” in 24,800 acres of transitional land on the western edge of Phoenix, the most populous city in Arizona and the 10th largest metropolitan area in the country. The acreage sits off Interstate 10, and it is poised to be accessible by Interstate 11, a proposed highway that would traverse 5 miles of the 40-square-mile holding. At buildout, the Belmont development will create a brand-new metropolis, one similar in size to the Phoenix suburb of Tempe, home to Arizona State University and almost 200,000 residents. According to The Arizona Republic, Belmont is projected to include up to 80,000 homes; 3,800 acres of industrial, office, and retail space; 3,400 acres of open space; and 470 acres for public schools.

Cascade Investment doubled down on Phoenix transitional land two years later when it made a second major investment by acquiring more than 2,800 acres known as Spurlock Ranch in Buckeye for $25 million.

https://landreport.com/2021/01/bill-gates-americas-top-farmland-owner/

Maybe not…

In 2014 GRAIN published a detailed breakdown of the grants made by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to promote agricultural development in Africa and other parts of the world.1 Our main conclusion then was that the vast majority of those grants were channelled to groups in the US and Europe, not Africa nor other parts of the global South. The funding overwhelmingly went to research institutes rather than farmers. They were also mainly directed at shaping policies to support industrial farming, not smallholders.

Much has happened since then. For starters, Bill and Melinda Gates announced their divorce in May this year, leaving the future of the Foundation and its grant-making in doubt. The news came as Bill Gates himself came under fire for supporting Big Pharma's patent monopoly on COVID-19 vaccines, for effectively preventing people's access across much of the world, and for how he treats - or mistreats - women.2 The Foundation's agenda with agriculture has also been coming under increased scrutiny. A 2020 report from Tufts University concluded that its work in Africa completely failed to meet the objectives that it had set itself.3 The African Centre for Biodiversity published a string of reports denouncing the Gates Foundation for pushing GMOs and other harmful technologies onto Africa.4 Amongst all this, the US Right to Know collective started a “Bill Gates Food Tracker” to monitor the multiple initiatives that Gates is involved in to reshape the global food system.

https://grain.org/en/article/6690-how-the-gates-foundation-is-driving-the-food-system-in-the-wrong-direction

Hold off on the pandemics and famine or we’ll start looking as bad as the CCP…

https://rumble.com/vtgxu3-theyll-be-worse-pandemics-than-this-thanks-bill..html