Sunday, May 28, 2023

US 'intentionally released Covid virus in Wuhan' EU summit told


US 'intentionally released Covid virus in Wuhan' EU summit told

Top News | Staff reporter 22 May 2023



American patent-auditing expert David Martin, testifying in Brussels, claims the US triggered the global pandemic in Wuhan to raise people's acceptance of vaccines.

The Covid-19 coronavirus was "intentionally released" by the United States in Wuhan, China, with the target to trigger a global pandemic to raise public acceptance of vaccines, a US businessman specializing in patent auditing said.

David Martin, the founding chairman of M Cam asset management company, said at an International Covid Summit organized by the European Parliament in Brussels earlier this month that the US was responsible for the making of both coronaviruses causing the outbreaks of severe acute respiratory syndrome - or SARS - in 2003 and the Covid-19 pandemic in the past three years.

The third edition of the summit featured speakers from anti-lockdown advocates to medical academia to discuss the global pandemic response. The speakers shed light on the possibility that the coronavirus which caused the pandemic was man-made, instead of naturally occurring.

In his speech, Martin said: "The pandemic that we alleged to have happened in the last few years did not happen overnight. In fact, the very specific pandemic using the coronavirus began at a different time."

He said that in 1965, scientists discovered the coronavirus as a model of a pathogen - an agent that causes disease. They also found out that coronaviruses can be modified.

"Later we started learning how to modify a coronavirus by putting them in animals such as dogs and pigs," Martin said, adding that such a practice became the basis for US pharmaceutical giant Pfizer's first coronavirus spike protein vaccine in 1990.

But very soon the medical sector and drug makers found out that the vaccines did not work.

"Because the coronavirus is a malleable model, it mutates," Martin said. "Every medical publication concluded that coronaviruses escape vaccines because it modifies and mutates too rapidly for a vaccine to be developed."

In 2002, a university in North Carolina initiated a study to develop an "infectious replication defective," which Martin interpreted as "a weapon to target individuals, but not have collateral damage."

Characterizing the project as having "mysteriously preceded SARS by a year," Martin said the coronavirus that caused the highly deadly infection was not from China and that it was "engineered" instead of naturally occurring.

On Covid-19, Martin said the coronavirus - named as SARS-CoV-2 by the World Health Organization - was poised for human emergence in 2016, with a preview about an "accidental or intentional release of a respiratory coronavirus" from a laboratory in Wuhan.

He said the purpose of the coronavirus "release" was to boost global acceptance on universal vaccination.

Explaining the common concern among the medical industry, Martin said: "Until an infectious crisis is very real, present and at the emergency threshold, it is often largely ignored.

"To sustain the funding base beyond the crisis, we need to increase the public understanding of the need for medical countermeasures, such as the pan-influenza, or pan-coronavirus, vaccine. A key drive is the media and the economics will follow the hype.

"We [pharmaceutical firms] need to use that hype to our advantage to get to the real issue. Investors will respond if they see profit at the end of the process," he said.

The Covid infection was first reported in Wuhan, Hubei province in central China in late 2019, with initial clusters coming from the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.

The disease turned into a global pandemic in early 2020.

As of Saturday, over 766 million infections have been recorded worldwide, with nearly seven million deaths.

The source of the coronavirus remained a mystery. Some scientists believe it transferred to humans from wild animals like bats and manidaes, while some politicians, in particular those from the US, accused the Wuhan Institute of Virology - a government-controlled lab - of leaking the pathogen.

A team of WHO-appointed experts inspected Wuhan in early 2021 to probe the source of the pandemic.

After the 12-day visit, including a visit to the lab, the scientists concluded that it is "extremely unlikely" that the lab could have leaked the Covid-19 coronavirus.




Dr David Martin at International Covid Summit III - European Parliament

Friday, May 26, 2023

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Pope appeals for a renewal of our relationship with Creation



A red tailed bumblebee gathers pollen from a flower
 

Pope Francis' message for the 2023 World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation is released focusing on the theme, “Let Justice and Peace Flow”, inspired by the words of the prophet Amos: “Let justice flow on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream.”

By Vatican News staff writer

In his Message for the World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation (released on Thursday 25 May ahead of the 2023 celebration on 1 September) Pope Francis chose the theme “Let Justice and Peace Flow," inspired by the words of the prophet Amos: “Let justice flow on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream.” The Pope begins by noting that, "God wants justice to reign; it is as essential to our life as God’s children made in his likeness as water is essential for our physical survival."

Pope Francis first instituted the September 1st World Day of Prayer for the Care of Creation in 2015, serving as a way to encourage the faithful around the world to pray for our common home. The annual day also marks the beginning of an ecumenical outreach bringing Christians to pray and work together in what is called the Season of Creation which lasts till 4 October, the feast of St. Francis of Assisi. The origins of the day also go back to Ecumenical Patriarch Dimitrios who proclaimed September 1 as Creation Day for the Orthodox in 1989, followed by other Christian European Churches in 2001, and by Pope Francis in 2015.

Hearts in harmony

Recalling his apostolic journey to Canada in July 2022, and in particular his visit to the Indigenous People on the shores of Lac Ste. Anne in Alberta, the Pope reflected on how so many of the people down through the ages have found "consolation and strength" from these waters, likening the natural beauty there to the "maternal heartbeat of the earth." And just as the heart of a baby in the womb beats in harmony with the mother, so also "we need to harmonize our own rhythms of life with those of creation, which gives us life."

"During this Season of Creation, let us dwell on those heartbeats: our own and those of our mothers and grandmothers, the heartbeat of creation and the heartbeat of God. Today they do not beat in harmony; they are not harmonized in justice and peace.," he writes.

And decrying the fact that too many of our brothers and sisters are prevented from drinking from that mighty river, the Pope says "Let us heed our call to stand with the victims of environmental and climate injustice, and to put an end to the senseless war against creation."

“Let us heed our call to stand with the victims of environmental and climate injustice, and to put an end to the senseless war against creation”

Thursday, May 04, 2023

Vatican commission funded by US foundation whose board included alleged clerical child abuser


Former cardinal Theodore McCarrick removed from ministry in 2019 following credible child sex abuse allegations made against him




Former cardinal Theodore McCarrick: in July 2021, he was charged with three counts of indecent assault and battery of a minor in Massachusetts. Photograph: Paolo Cocco/AFP via Getty Images

Patsy McGarry
Thu May 4 2023 - 17:07


Funding for the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, set up in 2014, comes from an American foundation whose board included former cardinal Theodore McCarrick who was laicised by Pope Francis in 2019 following credible child sex abuse allegations made against him.

He is the first cardinal removed from ministry by the Catholic Church in connection with the alleged abuse of minors.

In April, the 92-year-old former cardinal, one-time Catholic archbishop of Washington, faced the latest criminal charge of sexual assault of a minor against him relating to an alleged 1977 incident in Wisconsin.

In July 2021, he was charged with three counts of indecent assault and battery of a minor in Massachusetts. He pleaded not guilty and denied the allegations. At a hearing last February, he pleaded he was no longer mentally competent to stand trial and that the charges should be dismissed. The case is ongoing.

This week, as the crisis-beset Commission for the Protection of Minors meets in Rome, the French Catholic daily newspaper La Croix revealed that the commission’s annual budget of €500,000 is financed in large part by the GHR Foundation in the United States.

Cardinal McCarrick served on the GHR Foundation Board from 2006 to 2016. A Catholic nonprofit organisation, it also gave $1 million annually, between 2007 and 2014, to the Papal Foundation in support of the pope’s work and which then Archbishop McCarrick co-founded in 1988.

Letter

In 2018, the Minneapolis-based GHR Foundation cut ties with Cardinal McCarrick following his removal from ministry that year due to credible accusations of sexual abuse and misconduct.

This is the latest development in ongoing problems facing the commission.

Earlier this week, former president Mary McAleese, and former commission member and Dublin abuse survivor Marie Collins called on Pope Francis to set up “an independent, external review” of the commission.

That followed the resignation of Jesuit priest Fr Hans Zollner, a member of the commission since it was set up in 2014. He said it had yet to take seriously the principles of “transparency, compliance and responsibility” and that there were people in the Catholic Church who, “for personal or emotional reasons, create obstacles” in the fight against child abuse.

In a letter, both women expressed “deep concern” about this resignation from the commission “of its most experienced, globally respected and distinguished founding member” and warned that attempts being made by senior church figures to discredit Fr Zollner since his resignation “will fail”.

It is believed few former or current members of the commission, whose president is Boston-based Cardinal Sean O’Malley, would have been aware it was, for much of its existence, receiving funds from a foundation whose board included a former cardinal now facing serious child sex abuse charges.



Turnkey Totalitarianism | GTW #130 Preview


Wednesday, May 03, 2023

The Technology Of The Last Days




Volume 42 Issue Five May 2023

Last Trumpet Ministries · PO Box 806 · Beaver Dam, WI 53916

Phone: 920-887-2626 Internet: http://www.lasttrumpetministries.org

“For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?” I Cor. 14:8


The Technology Of The Last Days


“Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of sin be revealed, the son of perdition; Who opposeth and exalteth himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped; so that he as God sitteth in the temple of God, shewing himself that he is God.”

II Thessalonians 2:3-4


“For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first: Then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up together with them in the clouds, to meet the Lord in the air: and so shall we ever be with the Lord.”

I Thessalonians 4:16-17



I am part of the first generation to grow up with easily accessible technology. As a small child, I watched in awe as my father, Pastor David J. Meyer, used his Apple Macintosh computer to write the Last Trumpet Newsletter. As the years passed, he purchased new computers with each one being more advanced than the last. I first went online at age 14, and I purchased my first personal computer at age 16. A short time later, I began building computer systems from scratch. It was during this time that the Internet really began to transform the world.

Slowly but surely, the Internet went from a novelty to a convenience, and then to a necessity. In its current iteration, the Internet impacts nearly every facet of our lives. Schoolchildren use it to complete their assignments. Businesses use it to communicate and manage human resources. Restaurants use it to process credit card transactions and receive online orders. It has reached the point where you cannot so much as order a cheeseburger without interfacing with the online infrastructure. People all over the world go online to read books, listen to music, watch television, play video games, and participate in social media. Adults go online to pay bills, perform banking tasks, and file their income tax returns.

Behind the Algorithm: YouTube's Dark Secrets | ENDEVR Documentary