The former president criticized CNN’s
Dana Bash for her interview of Vice President
Kamala Harris and Minnesota Governor
Tim Walz last week, stating that she went easy on the Democratic ticket. Trump had previously
praised Bash and her colleague
Jake Tapper for how they moderated the first presidential debate in June. President
Joe Biden infamously turned in a
horrid performance that prompted party leaders and donors to begin a pressure campaign to get him to drop out, which he did in July.
“They said, ‘We want you out,'” Trump said of the pressure campaign. As he continued speaking, the ex-president eventually waved a hand near his face.
“And he wasn’t gonna win, I don’t think,” he continued. “I don’t think he was gonna win, but we did a good debate. We had a good debate and it was a fair debate. And he was down like 18 or 19 points after the debate – and I
hate mosquitoes. I’m surprised. I didn’t think we had– we don’t like those mosquitoes running around. We want nothing to do with them. But, and we want nothing to do with bad politicians that hate our country too if you wanna know the truth.”
and I
hate mosquitoes. I’m surprised. I didn’t think we had– we don’t like those mosquitoes running around.
We want nothing to do with them. But, and we want nothing to do with bad politicians that hate our country too if you wanna know the truth.”
From what I understand no vaccines have been manufactured yet for human consumption.
According to this:
West Nile virus (WNV) is a widely spread human pathogenic arthropod-borne virus. It can lead to severe, sometimes fatal, neurological disease. Over the last two decades, several vaccine candidates for the protection of humans from WNV have been developed. ...
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Conclusions
WNV remains a significant threat to humans in many parts of the world. Its potential to cause outbreaks in newly endemic areas, as exemplified in Europe 2018, is alarming. Its ability to acquire mutations which lead to increased virulence, paired with its flexibility in using various mosquito species as vectors and birds as amplifying hosts make epidemics extremely unpredictable. Global warming and the ever increasing traffic of humans, animals and goods are additional factors favoring the further spread of WNV. Consequently, a human vaccine would be essential to encounter this global threat.
Technologies for WNV vaccines have been developed, they are protective and safe. Some issues have prevented the transformation of these candidate vaccines into marketable products until now. However, there are possible ways to address and overcome these obstacles: to increase cost-effectiveness, the vaccine candidates need to be optimized for low production costs and long lasting effectiveness upon a single dose vaccine regimen. To avoid potential interference of immune responses to different flaviviruses in areas of co-circulation, vaccine candidates should be lacking epitopes which lead to binding of cross-reactive antibodies. Finally, due to the difficulties in planning efficacy trials, licensing procedures need to be adapted, similar to vaccines against other (re-) emerging infections.
I'm just putting this here for future references.
Just sayin...
one more,
We all love fact checkers..
No, it's not another microchip conspiracy.
www.snopes.com
On May 1, 2020, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
approved an experimental use permit to field test genetically modified mosquitoes but required that the company receive state and local approval before moving forward (read more about the
docket and
approval process). Under these parameters, the EPA required that the study be conducted over a two-year period in Monroe County, Florida, beginning in the summer of 2020 and in Harris County, Texas, beginning in 2021, for a total of 6,600 acres across the two states. In response to this
authorization, the agency received more than 31,000 public comments, most of which urged that the EPA not permit testing or delay it until more information was made available. The EPA issued a
150-page response to those comments, explaining its decision to move forward.
Harris County of course...
there are NO coincidences
lol
Hugs