Bill Gates has announced plans to mass vaccinate people using flying mosquitoes carrying the new bird flu mRNA vaccine. The Gates initiative is being conducted by researchers at Leiden University Medical Centre in the Netherlands.

The goal is to mass vaccinate the planet by using these mosquitoes to administer vaccines with or without public consent. Expose-news.com reports: Critics have raised concerns about safety, informed consent and unintended ecological impacts.

In November 2024 a study by Leiden University Medical Center  (LUMC) was published in the New England Journal of Medicine which concluded that mosquitoes could be used as flying vaccinators.

The study was supported by a donation from the Bontius Foundation.

This doesn’t tell us very much as the Bontius Foundation, also known as Bontius Stichting LUMC Research Foundation, funds and supports finding additional funding for scientific research at LUMC.

However, for years the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has supported LUMC’s research.

The Foundation granted LUMC $1,578,317 in September 2023 and another $2,287,871 in November 2024 for its malaria program.

In LUMC’s study, 43 adults aged 19 to 35 with no prior malaria history were divided into three groups. Each group received bites from mosquitoes carrying either the GA2 parasite, the GA1 parasite or no parasite (placebo).

The participants underwent three rounds of vaccination by mosquito, spaced 28 days apart. Three weeks after the final round, all participants were exposed to malaria through bites from infected mosquitoes.

The results showed that eight out of nine participants in the GA2 group were successfully protected against malaria, compared to only one out of eight in the GA1 group and none in the placebo group.

The Dutch researchers now seek to replicate their results in a larger human trial.

While it is claimed this method shows promise in combating malaria, it has raised ethical concerns regarding informed consent and medical safety.

Critics argue that bypassing traditional vaccination methods and consent procedures could be ethically unacceptable and set a dangerous precedent.

The concept of using mosquitoes as flying vaccinators is not new. In 2010, Japanese researcher Shigeto Yoshida modified mosquito saliva to deliver leishmania vaccines to mice, noting that vaccination by insect could be painless and cost-effective.

However, Yoshida also acknowledged that medical safety issues and concerns about informed consent mitigate the use of this method for vaccine delivery.

News Punch / ABC Flash Point News 2025.

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2 Comments
Donnchadh
Donnchadh
Member
January 9, 2025 17:46

After the COVID fiasco where big pharma USA made billions $$$$$$$$ saying one injection is all you need and a year later -uh ! we got it wrong one injection every year as it mutates , would you trust this guy with your life ? I thank God I live in a country where its too cold for mosquitos to survive but the US southern states will get the full force of this experiment , if the US government can drop chemicals on its own citizens by plane then some big lobbying money changing hands is all it takes ,… Read more »

FixOurElectionPlatform
FixOurElectionPlatform
Member
January 9, 2025 18:16

How does bill have this kind of power? Arrest this dangerous psychopath now.