Could Venturis Therapeutics's drug could be used to treat or cure impotence brought on by decades of out-of-control alcoholic consumption day after day, week after week, year after year, a.k.a. chronic alcoholism, which makes it impossible for these men to father children? Drunk sperm cells aren't able to find ovaries, they just instead naturally swim in the other direction to try and get to the bar. Could Venturis's drug change that?
Shouldn't Venturis Therapeutics file a patent on this? It would be as meaningful as their erectile dysfunction patents and frankly the rest of their patent portfolio. I suspect that when Venturis is liquidated, no one is going to have even the slightest interest in their "valuable" patents. There's not one useful one in the lot. So why not add another from this new clinical development program that has North Koreans investors so excited?
Oh, I forgot...companies on the verge of shutting down for good/bankruptcy that haven't run a single clinical trial since 2007 are not about to start a new clinical development program, North Korean-funded or not. And the reportedly stolen money from Tauren Explortaion which it's rumored has funded Venturis Therapeutics aka Cardiovascular Biotherapeutics (CVBT) these past few years has run out. Could Calvin Wallen III find more money to steal from somewhere else?