So much has happened over the past year that it may be hard to remember what life was like pre-COVID. But let’s flash back to December 2019, when the idea of social distancing, compulsory masking and lockdowns would have been met with disbelief and outrage by most Americans.
At
that time, most were blissfully unaware of the pandemic that would change the
world in the next few months. It wasn’t until December 31, 2019, that the
COVID-19 outbreak was first reported from Wuhan, China,1 and
at this point it was only referred to as cases of viral pneumonia, not a novel
coronavirus. I say “most” because it seems some people may have been aware of
something lurking much earlier than it appeared.
In
confidential documents3 revealed by the U.K.’s Daily Expose, Moderna, together
with the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), sent
mRNA coronavirus vaccine candidates to the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill December 12, 2019 — raising significant red flags. As The Daily
Expose reported:4
“What
did Moderna [and NIAID] know that we didn’t? In 2019 there was not any singular
coronavirus posing a threat to humanity which would warrant a vaccine, and
evidence suggests there hasn’t been a singular coronavirus posing a threat to
humanity throughout 2020 and 2021 either.”
COVID-19
Vaccine Candidate Was Released Prior to Pandemic
The
confidential disclosure agreement relays a material transfer agreement between
the providers — Moderna, NIAID and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) —
and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The providers agreed to
transfer “mRNA coronavirus vaccine candidates developed and jointly-owned by
NIAID and Moderna” to the university’s investigator.5
“The
material transfer agreement was signed the December 12th 2019 by Ralph Baric,
PhD, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and then signed by
Jacqueline Quay, Director of Licensing and Innovation Support at the University
of North Carolina on December 16th 2019,” Daily Expose
noted.
At this point, some backstory information
is more than relevant. We know with great certainty that researchers at China’s Wuhan
Institute of Virology (WIV) had access to and were doing gain-of-function research on
coronaviruses, and manipulating them to become more infectious and to more
easily infect humans. We also know that they collaborated with scientists in
the U.S. and received funding from the National Institutes of Health for such
research.
Baric,
who signed the material transfer agreement to investigate the mRNA coronavirus
vaccine candidate before there was a known COVID-19 pandemic, pioneered
techniques for genetically manipulating coronaviruses, according to Peter
Gøtzsche with the Institute for Scientific Freedom,6 and
these became a major focus for WIV.
Baric
worked closely with Shi Zhengli, Ph.D., the director of WIV’s Center for
Emerging Infectious Diseases, also known as “bat woman,” on research using
genetic engineering to create a “new bat SARS-like virus … that can jump
directly from its bat hosts to humans.” According to Gøtzsche:7
“Their
work focused on enhancing the ability of bat viruses to attack humans so as to
‘examine the emergence potential.’ In 2015, they created a novel virus by
taking the backbone of the SARS virus replacing its spike protein with one from
another bat virus known as SHC014-CoV. This manufactured virus was able to
infect a lab culture of cells from the human airways.
They
wrote that scientific review panels might deem their research too risky to
pursue but argued that it had the potential to prepare for and mitigate future
outbreaks. However, the value of gain-of-function studies in preventing the
COVID-19 pandemic was negative, as this research highly likely created the
pandemic.”
Moderna
Gets Emergency Use Approval for COVID Vaccines
The
rest of the story, as the saying goes, is history. December 12, 2019, Amy
Petrick, Ph.D., NIAID’s technology transfer specialist, signed the agreement,
along with Dr. Barney Graham, an investigator for NIAID, whose signature is
undated.8 May 12, 2020, just months later, Moderna was granted a
fast-track designation for its mRNA-1273 vaccine by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration. According to Moderna’s news release:9
“mRNA-1273
is an mRNA vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 encoding for a prefusion stabilized form
of the Spike (S) protein, which was selected by Moderna in collaboration with
investigators from Vaccine Research Center (VRC) at the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a part of the NIH.”
December 18, 2020 — about one year after
the material transfer agreement was signed — the FDA issued emergency use
authorization for Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine for use in individuals 18 years of
age and older.10 June 10, 2021, Moderna also filed for
emergency use authorization for its COVID-19 shot to be used in U.S.
adolescents aged 12 to 17 years.11 Yet, we still have no answers to some
glaring questions:12
“It
was not until January 9th 2020 that the WHO reported13 Chinese
authorities had determined the outbreak was due to a novel coronavirus which
later became known as SARS-CoV-2 with the alleged resultant disease dubbed
COVID-19. So why was an mRNA coronavirus vaccine candidate developed by Moderna
being transferred to the University of North Carolina on December 12th 2019?
…
Perhaps Moderna and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
would like to explain themselves in a court of law?”
SARS-CoV-2
Appears To Be Uniquely Able to Infect Humans
Nikolai
Petrovsky, professor of endocrinology at Flinders University College of
Medicine in Adelaide, Australia, is among those who has stated SARS-CoV-2
appears to be optimally designed to infect humans.14
His
team sought to identify a way by which animals might have comingled to give
rise to SARS-CoV-2, but concluded that it could not be a naturally occurring
virus. Petrovsky has previously stated it appears far more likely that the
virus was created in a laboratory without the use
of genetic engineering, by growing it in different kinds of animal cells.15
To
adapt the virus to humans, it would have been grown in cells that have the
human ACE2 receptor. Over time, the virus would then adapt and eventually gain
the ability to bind to the human receptor. U.S. Right to Know (USRTK) pointed
out that the issue of binding sites is an important one, as the distinctive
binding sites of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein “confer
‘near-optimal’ binding and entry of the virus into human cells.”16
Scientists
have argued that SARS-CoV-2’s unique binding sites may be the result of either
natural spillover in the wild or deliberate recombination of an unidentified
viral ancestor. Baric and others, including Peter Daszak, EcoHealth Alliance
president, to which he is closely tied, were quick to dismiss the lab-leak hypothesis, which
suggests that SARS-CoV-2 accidently leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China.
Yet, according to Gøtzsche:17
“On
9 December 2019, just before the outbreak of the pandemic, Daszak gave an
interview in which he talked in glowing terms of how his researchers at the
Wuhan Institute had created over 100 new SARS- related coronaviruses, some of
which could get into human cells and could cause untreatable SARS disease in
humanized mice … ”
Daszak’s
EcoHealth Alliance funded controversial GOF research at WIV; NIAID gave funding
to the EcoHealth Alliance, which then funneled it to WIV.18 Daszak,
despite working closely with WIV, was part of the World Health Organization’s investigative team charged
with identifying the origin of SARS-CoV-2. Not surprisingly, the
team dismissed the lab-accident theory.
Baric’s
SARS-Like Virus Wasn’t Made Public Until May 2020
Regarding the novel SARS-like
virus that Shi and Baric created in 2015, this research was conducted using a
grant from EcoHealth Alliance.
While
the information relating to the virus’ DNA and RNA sequences was supposed to
have been submitted to a national biotechnology information database when the
research was published, this wasn’t done until years later, in the midst of the
COVID-19 pandemic. As reported by Alexis Baden-Mayer,
political director for the Organic Consumers Association:19
“The
work, ‘A SARS-like cluster of circulating bat coronaviruses shows potential for
human emergence,’20 published in Nature in 2015 during the NIH’s moratorium21 on
gain-of-function research, was grandfathered in because it was initiated before
the moratorium … and because the request by Shi and Baric to continue their
research during the moratorium was approved by the NIH.
As
a condition of publication, Nature, like most scientific journals, requires22 authors
to submit new DNA and RNA sequences to GenBank, the U.S. National Center for
Biotechnology Information Database. Yet the new SARS-like virus Shi and Baric
created wasn’t deposited23 in GenBank until May
2020.”
Meanwhile,
both Baric24 and Daszak were involved in organizing the publication of
a scientific statement, published in The Lancet and signed by 26 additional
scientists, condemning inquiries into the lab-leak hypothesis as “conspiracy
theory.”25
Daszak
was also made a commissioner of the Lancet Commission on COVID-19, but now that
his extreme conflict of interest has been made public, he was recused from the
commission.26
Baric,
Daszak Downplay Lab-Leak Theory
At
the time The Lancet statement was released in February 2020, Daszak had advised
Baric against adding his signature because he wanted to “put it out in a way
that doesn’t link it back to our collaboration so we maximize an independent
voice.”27 The authors also declared no competing interests.
In an
update published June 21, 2021, The Lancet stated, “Some readers have
questioned the validity of this disclosure, particularly as it relates to one
of the authors, Peter Daszak.”28 The journal invited the
authors to “re-evaluate their competing interests,” and Daszak suddenly had
much more to say. His updated disclosure statement reads, in part:29
“EcoHealth
Alliance’s work in China includes collaboration with a range of universities
and governmental health and environmental science organizations, all of which
are listed in prior publications, three of which received funding from US
federal agencies as part of EcoHealth Alliance grants or cooperative
agreements, as publicly reported by NIH.
…
EcoHealth Alliance’s work in China involves assessing the risk of viral
spillover across the wildlife–livestock–human interface, and includes
behavioral and serological surveys of people, and ecological and virological
analyses of animals.
This
work includes the identification of viral sequences in bat samples, and has
resulted in the isolation of three bat SARS-related coronaviruses that are now
used as reagents to test therapeutics and vaccines.
It
also includes the production of a small number of recombinant bat coronaviruses
to analyze cell entry and other characteristics of bat coronaviruses for which
only the genetic sequences are available.”
Also of note, a special
review board, the Potential Pandemic Pathogens Control and Oversight (P3CO)
committee, was created within the Department of Health and Human Services to
evaluate whether grants involving dangerous pathogens are worth the risks.
Baden-Mayer
explained, “This committee was set up as a condition for lifting the 2014-2017
moratorium on gain-of-function research. The P3CO committee operates in secret.
Not even a membership list has been released.”30
Daszak
stated in his updated disclosure, “NIH reviewed the planned recombinant virus
work and deemed it does not meet the criteria that would warrant further
specific review by its Potential Pandemic Pathogen Care and Oversight (P3CO)
committee.”31
However, according to Rutgers University
professor Richard Ebright, an NIH grant for research involving the modification
of bat coronaviruses at the WIV was sneaked
through because the NIAID didn’t flag it for review.32 In other words, the WIV received federal funding from the NIAID
without the research first receiving a green-light from the HHS review board.
The NIAID apparently used a convenient
loophole in the review framework. As it turns out, it’s the funding agency’s
responsibility to flag potential GOF research for review. If it doesn’t, the
review board has no knowledge of it. According to Ebright, the NIAID and NIH
have “systemically thwarted — indeed systematically nullified — the HHS P3CO
Framework by declining to flag and forward proposals for review.”33
Sources
and References
- 2, 4, 5, 8, 12 The Daily Expose June 18, 2021
- 3 Confidential Disclosure
Agreement
- 6, 7, 17 Scientific Freedom May 19,
2021
- 9 WHO, COVID-19 Update
- 9 Moderna Press Release May 12,
2020
- 10 U.S. FDA December 18, 2020
- 11 Moderna June 10, 2021
- 13 WHO, Timeline: WHO’s COVID-19
response
- 14 YouTube June 13, 2021
- 15 Live Science April 18, 2020
- 16 USRTK December 14, 2020
- 18 Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists May 5, 2021
- 19, 30 Organic Consumers Association
September 3, 2020
- 20 Nature Medicine volume 21, pages1508–1513(2015)
- 21 PHE.gov October 17, 2014
- 22 Nature Research Reporting
Standards
- 23 Nature Medicine volume 26, page1146(2020)
- 24, 27 Yahoo June 21, 2021
- 25 USRTK November 18, 2020
- 26 New York Post June 22, 2021
- 28, 29, 31 The Lancet June 21, 2021
- 32, 33 Daily Caller April 4, 2021
Copyright
© Dr. Joseph Mercola