🚨"[T]he Department of Defense was...fake relabeling and substituting smaller batches...within a million-dose batch...they would throw in 30,000 doses of relabeled [jabs]...So that could be introduction of more toxic, smaller lots into larger lots and relabeling them."
— Sense Receptor (@SenseReceptor) May 11, 2024
Retired… pic.twitter.com/GU8pxzk57h
[T]he Department of Defense was...fake relabeling and substituting smaller batches...within a million-dose batch...they would throw in 30,000 doses of re-labeled [jabs]...So that could be the introduction of more toxic, smaller lots into larger lots and relabeling them."
Retired pharma R&D executive Sasha Latypova (@sasha_latypova) describes for James Delingpole (@JMCDelingpole) how the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) has "fake relabeled" COVID-19 injection batches and included them in much larger batches. Latypova notes that these batches may be "more toxic" than the rest of the batches in which they're included."[W]ith these poisons...there were many instances of clusters of deaths...and we just don't know what particular toxicity means, it could mean there are more deadly ingredients," Latypova says, referring to the variance in toxicity between COVID injection batches. The pharma exec notes that Craig Paardekooper, a pharmaceutical sciences student at Kingston University in England, "identified, at least in Europe, it was the freshness of it [the COVID injection vials]" that determined toxicity level.
"So Belgium was kind of like, a ground zero, it was highest toxicity in Belgium, because the plant is in Belgium. And then as you move away from Belgium, you have lower and lower [toxicity]," Latypova says. She notes succinctly: "If it's fresh, it's definitely deadly."
Perhaps most alarmingly, Latypova notes that she and her colleagues "found that the Department of Defense was also fake re-labeling and substituting smaller batches." She explains that "within a million-dose batch, they would throw in 30,000 doses of re-labeled [jabs], God knows where it's coming from, so they were doing that too. So that could be introduction of more toxic, smaller lots into larger lots and relabeling them."
"Nobody got prosecuted for this," Latypova adds.
"At this point, I call it murder," the retired pharma executive says. "I call it premeditated murder because there is such a category of premeditated murder called depraved indifference—it's when you knowingly inflict harm. And now we have them for several years, knowing that these products cause excessive death, and injury, and all they do is deny and continue. Deny and continue. So it is a premeditated murder."
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