Vaccine Antidote

And other good news

A lot of the things I’ve been sharing with you lately are gloomy.

And, it’s easy to fixate on the bad news because that’s what grabs your attention.

However… there are two pieces of recent good news that I’d like to share with you regarding vaccines and the WHO pandemic treaty.

1. McCullough Foundation Finds New mRNA Antidote

It’s common knowledge that mRNA vaccines aren’t vaccines and are terrible for your body.

mRNA vaccines use a new technology where mRNA hijacks your cells and starts replicating on its own, creating spike proteins in your body.

This is problematic because spike proteins cause a whole host of issues, and mRNA is very difficult to get rid of.

However, in a recent paper by the McCullough Foundation, they discuss two potential antidotes to mRNA vaccines—siRNA and RIBOTACs.

These two molecules specifically target and destroy mRNA from vaccines, stopping the production of spike protein and its side effects.

They say more research is needed to see if these two molecules are safe to use, but this is definitely a step in the right direction.

2. WHO Pandemic Treaty Rejected

The World Health Organization (WHO) has been working on a legally binding international treaty that would dictate how countries respond to future “health emergencies”.

This is especially concerning because the WHO would also get to dictate what constitutes a health emergency.

This (obviously) received pushback—people do not want unelected officials working for an organization funded by the Gates Foundation to have control over their rights.

So, in the weeks leading up to the World Health Assembly where treaty negotiations took place, people from all over the world protested.

There were huge rallies in Japan and Europe.

The Louisiana senate unanimously passed a bill that would prevent any measures mandated by the WHO from being implemented on Louisiana citizens.

As a result, the WHO failed to draft the treaty.

Since then, they’ve backed down—they’ve proposed a non-binding treaty and even removed the controversial Article 13A we were concerned about:

The WHO is still trying to push and get this drafted so we need to stay vigilant.

But this is great progress and goes to show how powerful it is to speak up and spread the word.

Until next time,

Kashif Khan

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