The vials themselves are the property of the DoD. On the CDC website, they've disclosed the terms of the contracts with the vaccination centers. And that's one of the terms. It explains that these vials are the property of the U.S. government but they're actually property of the Department of Defense. That's because DoD orders them from the pharma, and buys them, and distributes them. So they own it from the point when it comes out of the factory to the point when it is injected into the person. And that's another huge flag and essentially a violation of our consumer protection rights because we have a licensed pharmacy distribution network for a reason. They're also highly regulated. So pharmaceutical manufacturers are regulated. Pharmaceutical distributors are also highly regulated. So they take ownership or possession of the product. They're supposed to maintain it and trace it, and if there are any reports or any issues, then you can retrace them through the distribution network. For example, remove vials from the shelf, and remove a batch from the shelf. Yeah, so the Department of Defense owns these things, so they do not allow any 3rd-party testing, which is not an odd thing. I worked in the pharma and medical device industry and would constantly buy competitor's products that are approved. Once the product is approved and then a licensed distribution chain, well, you can order it from a distributor. And you can buy competitor's products and you can do testing and compare their studies with your own products, and everybody does it, obviously, because you want to know how you perform against others.
Now, in this case, the vials are the property of the U.S. government, and if you read the contract of vaccinators, you will see that they say that "If you do anything like this, don't you dare, because we'll accuse of stealing federal property." Even the vaccine cards, the stupid cards from the CDC, the paper cards, they're also the property of the U.S. government. You're not allowed to divert them either. That's in the U.S. Outside the U.S., it's handled a little differently. Nonetheless, despite all of this, many, many people, I know some of them who have done 3rd-party testing. And it's very difficult because you have to have access to very sophisticated equipment. Most of the people I know just do simply microscopy, you know, just looking at these things under a microscope
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