Moderna may claim ownership of children who received it’s Covid ‘vaccine’

Two completely unrelated stories crossed my path this week and I am going to join them for you.

Before I do this I need to warn you in advance – if you read this you will not be able to unread it. So, if you want a comfy quiet life in blue pill pharma utopia, please hit the back-button now. For the rest of you who wish to pass through the one-way door…

Remember this guy?

No, I don’t mean Christoper Walken (fantastic actor, btw). I mean the person he represents in the film Percy vs. Goliath – Percy Schmeiser.

It’s a really important film/legal case/story/history. For those in the #mousearmy who were paying attention we were discussing it back in January when the Moderna patent for the origin of SARS-Cov-2 first came up.

If you can’t be bothered to watch the film (you really, really should but I can’t make you), here is an article to introduce you to what Monsanto did to Percy and why it matters to every person on earth. You can also look it up on wikipedia – but wikipedia sucks so don’t give them the traffic. In the meantime, and for the purposes of this article I’m going to spell it out to you:

Percy vs Monsanto is a seminal Canadian Supreme Court ruling that a recipient of a patented product is under licensure to the patent owner, irrespective of whether the recipient consented to receive the product.

Seminal is the most appropriate word to use here as you’ll see soon. Put simply, Percy claimed that his crop was contaminated by Monsanto seed (which he never used). He lost his livelihood of self-grown seed and that of generations of his family before him because, as a result of the ruling, he could never use that contaminated seed again.

He “won” because the court didn’t make him pay Monsanto but he actually lost because he could not continue to farm and his life’s work was taken away from him.

Now we get to the two completely unrelated (😉) stories from this week. For my picture-reading followers I have displayed them side-by-side with a big red line to separate them, as you can see.

The big red line is there to show that these are totally separate stories, agreed? On the left you have the sudden rush from Moderna to sue Pfizer for patent infringement over the mRNA technology in the “Pfizer vaccine”. And on the right we have a new preprint last week (the Qin paper) which shows how wonderfully effective a new mRNA-LNP formulation for the flu vaccine is in a mouse model.

Call me cynical but once this article goes live I have a suspicion that this pre-print might disappear so just in case here it is in its full PDF glory.

To view the pdf, see the source article

Now, what drew my attention to this was this throwaway line in the “author’s summary” – which is like a second abstract (not sure why the first abstract wasn’t enough).

Ignoring the neutropenia elephant in the room (yes, person who has been coughing for 6 months and is constantly ill that’s you….) that is one big old throwaway line (highlighted in yellow). It made me go “WTF” on telegram today, and that’s always a bad sign.

I mean, WTF?

The authors scoot around this by suggesting there are some quasi-epigenetic mechanisms by which offspring can inherit some traits from parents, but I don’t think they apply here. It’s a really tenuous link. Here is the diagram explaining the situation:

What the experiment shows is this:

By the 2nd-4th litter1 of the originally injected (transfected) mice, the effect of the RNA injected via lipid nanoparticles is persistent, provided the original injection (transfection) was in the maternal line.

There is only one rational conclusion from this experiment, ignoring the bluster about epigenetics and various other tenuous stuff from the authors, and that is:

The RNA injected into the original mice was incorporated into the genome in the oocytes of the maternal line of mice.

And yes, we know that the following events happen with the LNP-mRNA technology

(1) The LNP are biodistributed to the ovaries2
(2) The LNP are transfectant agents and therefore will transfect any tissue in which they are biodistributed3
(3) The SARS-Cov-2 vaccine mRNA is reverse transcribed (from RNA into DNA)4

Which means that the Qin paper has just confirmed the (4) in this list, that is:

(4) Biodistribution of LNP-mRNA to the ovaries results in transfection of oocytes that result in integration of cDNA into the progeny genome

In plain English, the LNP transports the mRNA to the ovaries, then to the eggs (oocytes) and because of reverse transcription that same mRNA becomes integrated into the genetic material of the offspring, and their offspring, and their offspring… well you get the gist. The only way this effect can be seen in subsequent generations is if the mRNA/cDNA given to the original recipient is being expressed in the DNA/genome of the offspring.

So, now we are going to get opposing opinions. In one camp will be the “lucky mice children, they didn’t need to get the vaccine because it was already in their DNA”. In the other camp will be “those children did not consent to receive artificial patented DNA that nobody knows the long term effects of, this is eugenics”.

Just for fun, I’ve included a poll so you can do a clicky thing and say which camp you’re in…

To view the poll, see the source document

OK, so I hope you are with me so far and have understood the following, but I’ll recap anyway:

The Qin paper shows that the vaccine RNA included in a lipid nanoparticle (LNP), which is known/intended to go to the ovary, can get into the genetic line and produce the intended effect in 3-4 litters (at least) of the resulting mice.

Now – this is the important bit. If we think back to Percy vs Goliath (Schmeiser vs Monsanto) and put these two stories together we can conclude the following:

If a therapeutic patented RNA is injected into a mother, and it is passed to the offspring of that mother, the owner of the patent can claim licensure rights on the offspring.

Yes, I know. That sounds crazy, right. Something like “Big pharma corporations would never claim licensure rights on a human”.

In which case this US Supreme Court decision in 2013 was obviously meaningless, because we all trust those lovely fluffy pharma corporations to uphold human rights, obviously, don’t we?

Thank God for that then. So my statement doesn’t stand, obviously (but I’ll just repeat it here:

If a therapeutic patented RNA is injected into a mother, and it is passed to the offspring of that mother, the owner of the patent can claim licensure rights on the offspring.

And thankfully, because my statement is meaningless inaccurate misinformation then the last piece of the puzzle is also meaningless.

That is, that Moderna have sued Pfizer for a valueless5 lawsuit over a patent for technology that everyone knows was developed by both companies, overnight at the same time. Right?

Unfortunately, there is only one logical conclusion to this. If you have got this far in the article you might have realised it already. If you haven’t and the article has depressed you this may be a good time to press the back button. I am going to leave a gap and then produce my one-paragraph conclusion.

Feel free to disagree in the comments, but bear in mind that I don’t often make predictions. Maybe I’m not good at them. We’ll see.

This is the conclusion that you have ventured this far to read:

Moderna are going after the patent rights because they know that the children of mothers who have taken either Moderna or Pfizer mRNA vaccines can be subject to licensure.

In simple terms, Moderna may claim ownership of those children.

The good news? This can be stopped in its tracks. All you have to do is ask anybody that you know, friend, ex-friend or foe, who has received an mRNA therapy, to write to Pfizer or Moderna (whoever’s product they took) and request this :

“Please confirm that there will exist no circumstances following receipt of a Pfizer BNT162b2 or Moderna Spikevax mRNA vaccine (or other similar technology vaccination), that patent licensing rights or other means of trespass or claim of ownership – either in part or full – will ever be claimed by the company (or its derivatives or partners or any other related entity) on any human being who has received the said product either directly via administration or via inheritance, knowingly or unknowingly, from a recipient”.

Whichever way the company answers, I will have done my job here.

See more here: substack.com

Header image: Ruby Wallau

Some bold emphasis added

Please Donate Below To Support Our Ongoing Work To Expose The Lies About COVID19

PRINCIPIA SCIENTIFIC INTERNATIONAL, legally registered in the UK as a company incorporated for charitable purposes. Head Office: 27 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AX. 

Trackback from your site.

Comments (7)

  • Avatar

    Greg Spinolae

    |

    How many times have we heard:
    “Nah; they wouldn’t do THAT. Would they?”
    in the last 2½ years?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    NecktopPC

    |

    So in effect, Moderna had developed the 19 nucleotide gene sequence containing the Furin Cleavage Site which gives Covid-19 its infectivity to humans by patented gain of function research as early as 2013, 6 years before the Wuhan outbreak took place. Not 3 years, as reported in the Mail and virally elsewhere.
    https://expose-news.com/2022/09/04/real-reason-moderna-suing-pfizer/

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Herb Rose

    |

    Since Moderna owns the children can the parents of these children sue Moderna for all the costs associated with providing and raising these children?

    Reply

    • Avatar

      NicaLeon

      |

      Herb, stop trying to be cute, Modern does not own anyone’s children, no matter what legal chicanery they employ.

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Terry Shipman

    |

    Oh please. The controversy over Monsanto disallowing seed storage for next year’s crop of it’s patented Roundup Ready seeds is old news in the United States. The idea that a company might claim ownership of children might make a nice science fiction movie but that’s as far as it goes. We have something in our constitution called the 13th amendment that forbids ownership of human beings. Any such case would be laughed out of court in this country.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Seb

      |

      Fair point, however it was really interesting that Chilean courts passed an Anti-Mutant law recently. directly tied to the fact genetically modified humans, legally, are not humans. So they needed protections. source: https://expose-news.com/2022/02/25/a-law-to-protect-genetically-modified-humans/

      This is not to refute your position, but it is an odd thing to do (Chile), if this would be considered absurd concept (GMO Humans).

      Reply

  • Avatar

    monkey*poops

    |

    “He will ally himself with the kings, the princes and the powerful ones of the earth; he will condemn humility and will extol all the doctrines of pride. His magic art will feign the most astonishing prodigies; he will disturb the atmosphere, command thunder and tempest, produce hail and horrible lightning. He will move mountains, dry up streams, reanimate the withered verdure of forests. His arts will be practiced upon the elements,

    but chiefly upon man will he exhaust his infernal power. He will seem to take away health and restore it. How so? By sending some possessed soul into a dead body, to move it for a time. But these resurrections will be of short duration.

    st. Hildegard
    seems in context

    Reply

Leave a comment

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Share via