Coronavirus: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Fri Oct 8 13:50:12 PDT 2021


>>> After Fauci got exposed from FOIA etc...
>>> "Gain of Function"
>>> https://drasticresearch.org/
> "EcoHealth Alliance"
> FOIA Release: Fauci Funded Construction Of 'Chimeric Coronaviruses' In
> Wuhan

Per history, godmode programmes always explode,
here's one of the next to fail spectacularly,
Protip: Just like Wuhan, stay outta WA State...


https://www.geekwire.com/2021/preventing-next-pandemic-wsu-will-lead-125m-global-project-find-analyze-animal-viruses/
https://news.wsu.edu/press-release/2021/10/05/wsu-to-lead-125-million-usaid-project-to-detect-emerging-viruses/
https://stopspillover.tufts.edu/

Washington State University this week launched a new $125 million
program to collect and analyze animal viruses with the aim of
preventing the next pandemic. GeekWire reports: The program is funded
with an award from the U.S. Agency for International Development and
includes researchers at the University of Washington and the
Seattle-based nonprofit PATH. The project will partner with up to 12
countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America to build up lab capacity
for surveillance of animal viruses that have the potential to
"spillover" into humans and cause disease. The project will survey
wildlife and domesticated animals for three families of viruses --
coronaviruses, filoviruses (which includes Ebola), and paramyxoviruses
(which are in the same family as the measles and Nipah viruses).
Researchers will not be working in the lab with the live viruses and
will kill them as part of the collection process.

The team aims to collect more than 800,000 samples in the five years
of the project, called Discovery & Exploration of Emerging Pathogens
-- Viral Zoonoses, or DEEP VZN. The project is expected to yield 8,000
to 12,000 novel, previously unknown, viruses for analysis. The program
has parallels with another USAID-funded program, STOP Spillover, which
assesses risk factors for animal-to-human disease transmission and
implements interventions to stop it. DEEP VZN will select partner
sites outside the U.S. based on factors such as commitment to data
sharing and whether there are lots of interactions between humans and
animals in the region. Other partners for the project include
Washington University in St. Louis and the nonprofit FHI 360.


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