It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Of course the jabs will be Mrna ones.
The initiative is part of the WHO's mRNA Technology Transfer Program, which has a goal of building capacity in low- and middle-income countries to produce mRNA vaccines.
The U.S. government has also awarded Moderna $176 million to develop and test an mRNA vaccine that could be used for bird flu, Reuters reported in early July.[/quote[edit on 11-10-2024 by NorthOS because: (no reason given)
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: NorthOS
And June was not that long ago so probably still in development as the site suggests.
Current vaccines in use dont appear to be "mRNA-based".
As to how "safe and effective" they will be hopefully very, but that remains to be seen given they are still seemingly in development stages.
As to how "safe and effective" they will be hopefully very, but that remains to be seen given they are still seemingly in development stages.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: Astrocometus
I'm not developing the vaccine, think you may be asking the wrong person.
However according to the article yes Developmental stages.
The future of vaccines may look more like eating a salad than getting a shot in the arm. UC Riverside scientists are studying whether they can turn edible plants like lettuce into mRNA vaccine factories.
Messenger RNA or mRNA technology, used in COVID-19 vaccines, works by teaching our cells to recognize and protect us against infectious diseases.
www.universityofcalifornia.edu...
Scientists Developing mRNA-Based Vaccine Against H5N1 Bird Flu
Published May 28, 2024
US News
An experimental mRNA vaccine against the H5N1 avian flu is highly effective in preventing severe illness and death in lab animals, researchers report.
The vaccine could help fight the H5N1 bird flu outbreaks now spreading in wild birds, poultry and cows in the United States, researchers said.
Stopping those outbreaks is key to preventing the H5N1 flu from leaping into humans, researchers said.
www.unmc.edu...
Yes, messenger RNA (mRNA) is being used to develop a bird flu vaccine:
World Health Organization (WHO)
In July 2024, the WHO announced a project to develop an mRNA vaccine for human bird flu, also known as avian influenza. The project is led by Sinergium Biotech, an Argentinian pharmaceutical company. The goal is to identify vaccine candidates for manufacturers in low- and middle-income countries.
mRNA technology
mRNA vaccines teach the body to produce proteins that trigger an immune response to fight off an infection. This is different from most vaccines, which use a weakened or inactive virus to stimulate an immune response. mRNA vaccines can often be designed more quickly than traditional vaccines.
mRNA “technology” is not a vaccine, it is genetic manipulation. The synthetic spike protein used to “teach cells to fight disease” is very persistent and travels all over the body. As we saw with the Covid shots, pathogens adapt quickly requiring multiple boosters to try to stay ahead of disease. European studies cited by Peter McCullough show that this same mRNA never clears the body and is transmissible in meat to humans and survives digestion. Additionally, no one knows what the long-term effects of altered genes will be to either animal or human health.
We are just beginning to see a legislative battle over how this will be regulated. The Missouri House of Representatives introduced a bill requiring gene-altering products to be labeled as such. The National Cattlemen's Beef Association (which Merck is a primary sponsor of) and other Big Ag groups are pushing back to keep it off the label. ‘Conditional licenses' for swine flu and avian influenza have already been granted by the FDA and industry-wide trials in beef are underway. Contrary to what is being implied, mRNA-treated poultry, pork, and now beef are already in the food supply!
redhillharvest.com...
What are the disadvantages of mRNA vaccines?
Anaphylaxis, antibody-dependent enhancements, and deaths, comprise the most serious side-effects, albeit occurring in sparing numbers.
To bad you're not, I bet you'd be far more trustworthy.
originally posted by: andy06shake
a reply to: StoutBroux
mRNA acts as a delivery mechanism StoutBroux.
It's what it was designed to do since the mid-90s.
When the technology was first developed and the research done that laid the groundwork.
Just saying what the technology is and where it came from.
originally posted by: annonentity
.... no doubt the next move will be euthanizing your chickens ...