Let’s return to a discussion of COVID-19, its origin, and the unchallengeable government narrative. Fortunately, there are many influential people who are continuing to raise questions with respect to these issues. It is too early to reach any conclusions as to whether anyone will be held responsible, but it is nevertheless encouraging that questions continue to be raised. It is also encouraging there are influential people who have refused to allow the world to simply move on from this unnecessary disaster of literally epidemic proportions.
One of those people is Robert Kennedy, Jr. Robert Kennedy, Jr., recently reminded us that Dr. Anthony Fauci has been in charge of developing bioweapons for the Pentagon since 2002. Under the Patriot Act, Dr. Fauci was initially provided with $2.2 billion through the National Institute of Health (NIH) for bioweapons development. According to Kennedy’s research, after Dr. Fauci was given “a 68% raise from the Pentagon,” he began doing gain-of-function research with repect to viruses. Most, if not all of this research was initially performed in the continental United States. However, in 2014, three viruses escaped from different US labs, and Dr. Fauci moved his bioweapons research to the Wuhan lab in China after hearings were held in the Congress.
In fact, at that time, 300 of the top scientists signed letters to President Obama warning the President that Dr. Fauci was very likely to create a pandemic if he continued this research, and thus, he needed to be shut down. President Obama acted on that advice and ordered a moratorium on that research in the United States. Dr. Fauci was then overseeing eighteen different gain-of-function experiments he was doing around the United States.
As we now know, he simply relocated his research with the same people that he had funded in the United States, Ralph Baric and Peter Dazak, among others, to Wuhan, China in order to remain out-of-sight of both the critical scientific community and government oversight. However, as we now know, that could not save an interconnected world from a super-virus outbreak. Such a virus cannot be locally contained, and it quickly spread around the world, killing over 7 million people to date.